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Shirogesho Bowl

£14000

Named after the traditional thick white make-up worn by geisha, the white Warabai glaze and gentle crackle on this Shirogesho bowl gives a refined and calming feeling. Traditionally, this shape would have been used as a vase, but we think it makes a beautiful shape for a fruit or salad bowl

  • 32cm Diameter, 6.5cm High
  • Stoneware (see our Care Guide)
  • Hand thrown at the Kuninari Kiln in Ishikawa prefecture on the North side of Honshū, the main island of Japan

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Free returns within the UK

All damage must be reported to us within 14 days of receiving the package

Full delivery and returns policy is here

Care Guide

Any additional information will be in our care guide

Meet the Maker:

Kuninari Kiln

The large bowls he makes for us originally started out as ikebana vases but they make fine (and perfectly safe) salad and fruit bowls. They range from a dark tenmoku glaze to two brighter green oribe glazes, both inspired by the birth of the tea ceremony.

Maeda san uses clay from his brother's paddy fields which he fires in a gas kiln. The tenmoku and oribe glazes are sometimes offset by his warabai or rice husk ash glaze. Taking the left over rice straw after his brother's family's rice harvest he will burn the rice straw and refine the ash in water to create this textured off-white glaze.

Short and wiry but with a glint in his eyes, after getting through his initial reserve, Maeda san is really fun to work with. Swallows constantly flit in and out of his workshop where they build their nests to try and escape the snakes. He also shares the workshop with his son who creates monolithic patterned sculptural pieces.