Ceramic bottle

Elevate your home decor with unique ceramic bottle designs. Discover top ideas to add a touch of elegance and style to your living space.
Pottery, Ceramics, Ceramic Bottle, Ceramics Ideas Pottery, Pottery Ideas, Pottery Techniques, Handmade Ceramics, Olive Oil Bottle Design, Bottle Design

LEAD TIME 2-3 WEEKS Oil dispenser cruet, Ceramic oil bottle, olive oil bottle, , olive oil dispenser Handmade Ceramic oil bottle, this unique olive oil bottle is wheel thrown with white stoneware and glazed with a food safe glaze perfect for the rustic kitchen. This olive oil dispenser is practical when cooking and when eating . Holds approx. 11 oz 8" tall and 3" wide PLEASE NOT THE MOTTLED STEEL IS NOT BLACK…

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Mia Shaw
Ceramic Art, Inspiration, Ceramics, Design, Ceramic Jug, Ceramic Bottle, Ceramic Jugs, Ceramic Artists, Ceramics Pottery Art

Potter Osamu Futagawa is a graduate of the Design Technology Environmental Design Department at Sangyo University where he also attended graduate school. Well know ceramic artist Satoru Hoshino a teacher in his program was an early influence. He currently produces a line of functional wheel-thrown tableware at his studio in Sakai City on the edge of Osaka Bay. Osamu who produces his work in two finishes (a white and black glaze) considers his ceramics vessel to be practical “tools” to be…

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Heidi Clover
Figurative Bottle, Salinar, 200 BC - 100 AD, ceramic orangeware, Peru. "The Salinar ceramics largely carries on the traditions of the Cupinisque ceramics. What is missing from the Salinar vessels, however, is the artistic elegance of the Cupinisque ceramics. It has been replaced by fresh directness. The sculptural decorative motifs of the Salinar ceramics were animals and people..." Teotihuacan, Ceramic Art, Ceramics, Ceramic Sculpture Figurative, Ceramic Bottle, Ceramic Figures, Ceramic Artists, Ceramic Vessel, Pottery Art

Most Salinar pottery was fired in kilns that allowed in abundant oxygen, creating orange colored ceramics rather than the dark brown and black ceramics common prior to this period. Many Salinar ceramics have thick ribbons of clay used to create handles on the side of the vessel, rather than thicker stirrup spouts at the top that are prevalent prior to this time period. In this case, the handle intersects with a funnel-shaped “hat” worn by the figure depicted on this vessel, a hat that is…

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Jiří Skalský