Loam brings together three tableware forms, Nok, Nyasa and Kora, each designed for a specific use.
The four colourways draw from the natural world. Okra and Maize hold the warm tones of agricultural pigments and dried grain. Volta is a deep silvery blue, drawn from the surface of the river. Coal is a dense charcoal with brown-grey undertones, from the soot of clay pots fired over open coals.
Tableware made for daily use, stacked on shelves and reached for often. Bowls made for breakfast, broth, soup, sides and composed servings at the table.
Made to sip
Named after the Aya (“fern”), a symbol of endurance. Sculptural bowls in Rust and Black Silt that capture nature’s balance between decay and renewal.
A collection of paired water vessels finished with raw clay exteriors and glazed interiors
Tableware designed for the palm of the hand. Bowls to balance function with simplicity.
Made to stack, hold and sip.
A series inspired by early-world storage vessels of pre-industrial households.
The shapes are old; the bodies are new.
Named after the Aya (“fern”), a symbol of endurance. Sculptural bowls in Rust and Black Silt that capture nature’s balance between decay and renewal.
A collection of paired water vessels finished with raw clay exteriors and glazed interiors
Tableware designed for the palm of the hand. Bowls to balance function with simplicity.
Inspired by early-world storage vessels of pre-industrial households. Old shapes, new bodies.