Ceramics and artworks — wheel-thrown, hand-built, and fired. Made on weekends, shaped by curiosity.
Ceramic fruit basket with a stunning burgundy glaze that transitions into beautiful teal accents. The pierced decorative top adds an artistic touch to this handcrafted functional piece.
When was the last time you felt awe like a child? I felt it just looking at these chess pieces I made — beautifully glazed, each one unique. As a potter, there's this constant anxiety. It's such a long process from clay to twin fires, and when you're trying something for the first time, you never really know how it will turn out. But then this happens.
Work in progress — inspired by lunar craters, sea textures, and forest floor details. Bringing together earth, sea, and space through clay.
First time with black clay. Hand-built moon-inspired vase with organic holes — admiring this earthy texture.
Two ceramic vases ready for fresh blooms or dried eucalyptus! The turquoise glaze flows against the natural clay base. Simple, timeless forms.
You start with mud and water. Shape little soldiers and kings with your hands. Throw them in fire. Now they are hard as rock. Put them on a board and suddenly everyone thinks they are a genius. Chess and clay makes fools of us all.
Second batch off the wheel and trimmed! These brave survivors made it through the throwing and trimming — some clay casualties left behind. Ready for bisque firing… fingers crossed!
Back to the wheel after more than a year away, and it feels like coming home to the earth itself. There's something mindful about centering clay again — the quiet rhythm, the honest work of shaping something from raw earth. Each piece holds the memory of my hands returning to this ancient craft, imperfect but full of intention.
Handcrafted porcelain espresso cup with a modern twist! The saucer's unique shape — a curvy rectangle — adds an abstract flair to coffee moments.
Handmade olive green, speckle-glazed porcelain mugs. A humble embrace of nature's beauty in everyday objects.
Espresso tumbler, olive-green speckled glaze on porcelain.
Test tile. Introducing glaze Ava Oceanic — crafted my first ever glaze using raw materials. Turquoise shade, deep and intriguing as an oceanic landscape. Naming it after my most precious inspiration, my daughter Ava.
Introducing abstract designs on pottery — pots with a rugged pearl-like glaze. Artistic expression finding form in abstraction.