











Smoke Fired Bud Vase IV
Round. For a sprig or two of whatever you snip out of the garden (or whatever your favorite child yanks out of the neighbor’s yard).
All similar but thrown at ease, not precisely measured. Approximately 2 1/2" tall and wide. with an itty bitty opening, not quite big enough for your pinky.
Each listing is for a specific piece, photographed from several sides and angles.
These pit fired pieces are something quite special. The materials included in each firing vary throughout the season. The latest small batch utilized what is listed below as combustibles as well as fine filaments of steel wool and copper wire which offer flecks and scatterings of metallic impressions, most often in a rust color.
Thrown in a light porcelain stoneware combined clay and fired once in the studio kiln, draped in organic material from the chicken coop: wood shavings, droppings, errant feathers, grain and seeds, dried clippings from the garden, tucked into individual pouches of aluminum then fired in the studio yard pit where the combustibles ignite to create layers and depth, marking and masking in turn, smoke penetrating bare clay leaving abstract impressions and manifesting a galaxy in a single pot.
Pit fired pottery is unglazed and the interiors coated in a watertight sealant making these functional for cut flowers. Exteriors are waxed and buffed.
Round. For a sprig or two of whatever you snip out of the garden (or whatever your favorite child yanks out of the neighbor’s yard).
All similar but thrown at ease, not precisely measured. Approximately 2 1/2" tall and wide. with an itty bitty opening, not quite big enough for your pinky.
Each listing is for a specific piece, photographed from several sides and angles.
These pit fired pieces are something quite special. The materials included in each firing vary throughout the season. The latest small batch utilized what is listed below as combustibles as well as fine filaments of steel wool and copper wire which offer flecks and scatterings of metallic impressions, most often in a rust color.
Thrown in a light porcelain stoneware combined clay and fired once in the studio kiln, draped in organic material from the chicken coop: wood shavings, droppings, errant feathers, grain and seeds, dried clippings from the garden, tucked into individual pouches of aluminum then fired in the studio yard pit where the combustibles ignite to create layers and depth, marking and masking in turn, smoke penetrating bare clay leaving abstract impressions and manifesting a galaxy in a single pot.
Pit fired pottery is unglazed and the interiors coated in a watertight sealant making these functional for cut flowers. Exteriors are waxed and buffed.
Round. For a sprig or two of whatever you snip out of the garden (or whatever your favorite child yanks out of the neighbor’s yard).
All similar but thrown at ease, not precisely measured. Approximately 2 1/2" tall and wide. with an itty bitty opening, not quite big enough for your pinky.
Each listing is for a specific piece, photographed from several sides and angles.
These pit fired pieces are something quite special. The materials included in each firing vary throughout the season. The latest small batch utilized what is listed below as combustibles as well as fine filaments of steel wool and copper wire which offer flecks and scatterings of metallic impressions, most often in a rust color.
Thrown in a light porcelain stoneware combined clay and fired once in the studio kiln, draped in organic material from the chicken coop: wood shavings, droppings, errant feathers, grain and seeds, dried clippings from the garden, tucked into individual pouches of aluminum then fired in the studio yard pit where the combustibles ignite to create layers and depth, marking and masking in turn, smoke penetrating bare clay leaving abstract impressions and manifesting a galaxy in a single pot.
Pit fired pottery is unglazed and the interiors coated in a watertight sealant making these functional for cut flowers. Exteriors are waxed and buffed.
Each piece of LULA Pottery is made by my hands, and you should expect to see natural variations brought about by human touch.
$5 of every purchase $35 and over is donated directly to the World Central Kitchen-See Giving page for details.