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Beige dinner plate

€47
Diameter
Production time

Ships within 3 to 5 business days

Crafting

Plate entirely handmade by Jérôme Hirson. Each ceramic piece shows natural irregularities due to the artisanal process: these variations and imperfections make every plate unique.

Materials

- Textured stoneware
- Matte glaze

Use and care

This piece is suitable for everyday use and is microwave and dishwasher safe. We recommend avoiding thermal shocks, which could weaken it.

Delivery and returns

Nous expédions partout dans le monde. Tous nos colis sont expédiés depuis la France et sont assurés afin de pouvoir procéder au remboursement de votre commande en cas de perte ou de casse. Pour plus d'informations, consultez notre politique d'expédition et notre politique de retours et remboursement

Diameter

At the origins

The hand

Each curve, each thickness, each line is born from the gesture. The hand guides, adjusts, begins again. It imprints a rhythm, an attention, an intention on the clay. It is the hand that shapes without artifice, without machines, as close as possible to the material. In this silent dialogue between the hand and the clay, the piece gradually takes shape—imperfect, alive, unique.

Clay

Resulting from the slow erosion of rocks, patiently disintegrated by wind, water, and time, it is the result of millions of years of silent transformation, at the heart of the landscapes. Everything starts there. From this simple material, shaped by time and the elements, which makes each piece possible.

Rocks

Silica, feldspar, kaolin, etc. These raw minerals, ground into powder and extracted from rocks, are the essential raw materials for making our enamels. They come to life in the workshop, according to precise recipes. Once applied to the piece, the enamel vitrifies at high temperatures, revealing textures, nuances, and depths.

Water

Water is everywhere. It is the primary vector of erosion, the one that slowly transforms rock into clay. It is also essential to every stage of our work: it softens the earth, makes shaping possible, and binds the raw materials of our glazes. Present in both the gesture and the material, water is a discreet but essential element—without it, nothing takes shape.

Air

Air acts silently. Over time, it shapes the reliefs and hollows out the rock—contributing to the erosion that gives birth to clay. In the studio, it's the air that allows the pieces to dry slowly, naturally. It accompanies each step of the process, without ever being seen. Air is invisible, but essential. It is part of the long process that gives life to each ceramic.

Fire

After days of shaping, drying, and waiting, the pieces enter the kiln. The clay transforms, hardens, thickens, and becomes ceramic. The glaze melts, vitrifies, and reveals its nuances. Within a few hours, the pieces become incandescent, almost liquid. Each firing is unique, unpredictable. The fire determines, in part, the final result. It is the fire that seals the form and inscribes the material over time.

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