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‘S-05
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【Specification Details】
Dimensions: 10.0cm × 10.0cm × 7.0cm
Product number: ‘S-05
Remarks:
・There may be slight variations in dimensions between products, as well as individual differences in the white patterns characteristic of carbonization firing. Some items may not have white patterns.
・The images provided are of the actual product. However, depending on the display on which you are viewing them, colors and images may differ slightly. Your understanding is appreciated in advance.
・There is a small hole at the bottom of the pot to prevent water accumulation. A dish to catch the water coming out of the hole is included. The dish is also made using carbonization firing, just like the plant pot.本文を入力してください。
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【Craftsman Information】
The artist, born into a pottery studio in Seto City, Aichi Prefecture, which has continued the tradition of Oribe ware since the early Meiji era, handcrafts each item meticulously.本文を入力してください。
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【Japanese Artisan Technique Used】
“Carbonization Firing”
This technique involves firing clay in an oxygen-deprived kiln environment together with sawdust and charcoal, leading to a hardened, darkened clay. The resulting unique black expression and texture of the clay, having absorbed carbon, can be appreciated in the final product.本文を入力してください。
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【Brand Concept】
Renovation of artisan skills.
Just as old buildings are reborn to fit modern life,
what if the fading Japanese artisan techniques could be renovated to suit the times?
In order to deliver these artisan skills to people living in the present,
the artisans themselves create forms that blend into contemporary lifestyles.
This is the distinctive feature of our brand本文を入力してください。
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Discover the deep black plant pot, created using a technique called ‘carbonization firing’, appearing as though it’s crafted from charcoal. ‘Carbonization firing’ involves kiln-firing the clay with sawdust and charcoal in an oxygen-deprived environment, resulting in the clay hardening into a dark hue. One can appreciate the unique black expression and texture of the clay, which has absorbed carbon. Born in a pottery studio in Seto City, Aichi Prefecture, a workshop that continues the Oribe ware tradition from the early Meiji era, the artist, inheriting years of tradition, developed this unique firing method through trial and error.