A mug with a rounded body shape and an engraving that is stamped one by one.
The delicately thinly designed mouth tip has an easy-to-drink finish.
In order to be able to reproduce the engraved pattern as it is by hand, it is made using a complex mold called a warigata.
It is a content that can hold plenty of coffee and tea.
This series has a cracked glaze pattern on the surface called penetration. If you use it in a dark-colored drink or dish, it will be easier for it to soak into the penetration.
Ståmp (stamp)
The design is Western-style tableware, and the techniques and materials are made using Japanese techniques. Using a technique called "Inbana," which is made by pressing flower patterns that have been handed down since ancient times in Japan, the pattern is expressed, and the shades of the glaze and the warmth of handwork are expressed.
This series is a series of soft materials called semi-porcelain, which is a mixture of earth and porcelain materials, and a glaze with a cracked surface like glass.
The engraving that enters the body is manually stamped one by one, and the pattern is different from the clay prototype to the mold again, resulting in a finish with a strong sense of craft.
The materials used, the techniques used, and the base shape incorporate Western tastes, but it is a series that features an oriental atmosphere that is not found in conventional Western tableware.