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Thursday, December 26, 2024

Mugs52 Is Again—Meet The Makers Behind Our 2024 Assortment


After a virtually year-long collaboration with among the most gifted ceramicists throughout the nation, we’re so excited to introduce this yr’s Mugs52 assortment. Provide is proscribed, so get your arms in your favourite items ASAP.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

1. A Query of Eagles

  • Location: Broad Ripple, IN
  • What was the inspiration in your design? Shade was forefront on our thoughts this yr, so we took a deep dive researching vacation decor rooted in additional European traditions. There, we discovered plenty of stripes and daring colours to encourage us for our mug. We predict it exudes a comfy allure for consuming scorching cocoa in your snow coated cottage. Simply add a plaid tablecloth for max sample play.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

2. Andrew Molleur Studio

  • Ceramicist: Andrew Molleur
  • Location: Kingston, NY
  • What was the most important problem of designing this mug? The most important problem to designing this mug was attaining the right proportions. For instance, the deal with is giant sufficient to slide a minimum of two fingers behind, suits the mug physique, and does not really feel uncomfortable to carry and drink from when it’s stuffed with liquid.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

3. Base Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Catalina Parra
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? What many don’t understand is that every mug is hand-painted utilizing layers of coloured clay, giving the colours a wealthy depth, and making each piece really one-of-a-kind.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

4. Newbie Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Jesse Hamerman
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? The scale could be good for ice cream, cereal, even a selfmade warming hen broth. You can too use it as a planter for a succulent, a pen holder, a container to make {custom} candles—there’s so many potentialities.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

5. BG Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Bennett Graves
  • Location: Pittsburgh, PA
  • What was the inspiration in your design? I drink a number of matcha lattes at dwelling and wished to create my very best mug for that event. The glazes are impressed by the colours and textures of a glacial pool and felt like the proper backdrop for the colourful inexperienced of matcha.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

6. BKLYN Clay

  • Ceramicist: Laura Vogel
  • Location: New York, NY
  • What was the inspiration in your design? Our inspiration was classic journey mugs. They had been made to maintain your espresso on the dashboard whereas driving, which we expect could be very cool.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

7. Bombabird

  • Ceramicist: Chelsea Erdner
  • Location: Pittsburgh, PA
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? The mug is created from a white stoneware and completed in a {custom} glaze, blended in my studio. The inside of the mug has a satin robin’s egg blue glaze whereas the outside is dipped in a extra textured pale blue with some speckles. Every glaze is a special hue of blue however I really like how properly they praise one another.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

8. Carved Shade

  • Ceramicist: Taylor Suchy
  • Location: Newport Seaside, CA
  • What was the most important problem of designing this mug? The most important problem this yr was preserving the traces on the design clear. The secondary clay physique on the skin is extra textured and tough so the glaze slips in between the tape when masking it off.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

9. Connor McGinn Studios

  • Ceramicist: Connor McGinn
  • Location: Tarrytown, NY
  • What our staff loves about this mug: The form and coloration—it is a combo that begs us to drink espresso from it.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

10. Earth + Factor

  • Ceramicist: Elizabeth Gold
  • Location: Los Angeles, CA
  • What was the inspiration in your design? We drew inspiration from the comfortable, timeless enchantment of fall plaid for this mug design. Every cup is meticulously hand-painted with delicate iridescent matte stripes, which, when fired, softly blur to create a stupendous, one-of-a-kind impact. This natural variation makes each mug really distinctive, reflecting the contact of our three gifted native artisans in our Los Angeles studio.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

11. East Fork Pottery

  • Location: Asheville, NC
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? This mug is ideal for pouring a chilly one.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

12. Ekua Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Sara Todd
  • Location: Lengthy Seaside, CA
  • What was the inspiration in your design? I wished one thing warming however acquainted. I believe the oxblood glaze and the pink actually complement one another whereas additionally not being too boring.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

13. Elizabeth Benotti

  • Ceramicist: Elizabeth Benotti
  • Location: Eliot, ME
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? This mug is hand constructed from porcelain slabs as an alternative of being wheel-thrown. Each bit is rigorously assembled, with the blue underglaze hand-painted, after which the herringbone sample is carved out in a course of known as sgraffito.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

14. Erin Louise Clancy

  • Ceramicist: Erin Clancy
  • Location: Queens, NY
  • What was the most important problem of designing this mug? The most important problem in designing this mug lies within the Mishima approach used to create its herringbone or knit/purl sample. This ceramic methodology includes making use of a contrasting coloration of slip into the grooves of an etched clay floor, requiring cautious hand-carving and inlay with porcelain slip. Each bit demanded care and a focus to efficiently obtain the intricate floor sample.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

15. Fenway Clayworks

  • Ceramicist: Sean VanderVilet
  • Location: Golden, CO
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? My objective is alway to make objects that may exist on a counter when not getting used, and nonetheless present an fascinating visible aspect to an area. I believe these mugs slot in that class. If not for espresso or tea, heck, use it for ice cream.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

16. Fisheye Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Kim Gilmour
  • Location: Catskill, NY
  • What was the most important problem of designing this mug? I wished to make a mug that might maintain a considerable quantity of espresso or tea, however that additionally felt gentle and cozy and secure when held. Every mug is hand thrown, so it’s all the time a problem to realize all of that with each. The handles are a specific problem as you wish to make it snug to carry for various hand sizes.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

17. Franca

  • Ceramicist: Sierra Yip-Bannicq
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? Every Cara mug is hand-painted, so no two mugs are equivalent. The delicate variations in brushwork and glaze software make each piece one-of-a-kind. Made in our Brooklyn-based women-owned studio, this mug is a celebration of each artwork and craftsmanship.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

18. G’Day Thrillseekers

  • Ceramicist: Hannah Groff
  • Location: NY
  • What was the inspiration in your design? I drew a number of inspiration from my intensive tinned fish assortment, and the traditional Hudson River Estuary signal with the gorgeous blue sturgeon on it that you just see throughout New York.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

19. Handmade Studio TN

  • Ceramicist: Amber Durrett
  • Location: Nashville, TN
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? Each single mug takes weeks to finish from begin to end. Every step is approached with care and love, from molding the clay, to impressing the feel, to firing within the kiln, to wrapping up and delivery to our prospects! We hope you like them as a lot as we liked making them!

Photograph by Armando Rafael

20. Heo Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Karent Tong
  • Location: Los Angeles, CA
  • What was the inspiration in your design? My studio Heo Ceramics takes its identify from the Vietnamese phrase “heo” which suggests boar, or pig. I used to be born within the Yr of the Pig, and the coil of a pig’s tail has all the time drawn my eye and made me smile. The deal with on these mugs was designed to evoke that very same feeling!

Photograph by Armando Rafael

21. IIIVVVYYY Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Ivy Weinglass
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? Certainly one of my favourite issues to drink out of my mugs is miso soup! After I’m at my studio and I would like one thing nourishing and heat, I put a packet of miso soup with some scorching water in a mug, stir and sip on all of it day!

Photograph by Armando Rafael

22. Jeremy Ayers

  • Location: Waterbury, VT
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? The stripes on this mug are the uncooked clay of the mug itself. The colour of the uncooked clay varies from mug to mug relying on the place it was within the kiln.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

23. Jessie Lazar

  • Ceramicist: Jessie Lazar
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • What our staff loves about this mug: Two issues: Speckles and deal with. The previous’s simply enjoyable—a playful reminder that your routine cup of joe is value celebrating. And the latter, properly, it merely feels actually, actually good in your hand.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

24. Kendall Davis Clay

  • Ceramicist: Kendall Davis
  • Location: Fort Price, TX
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? You can all the time use my mug to secretly be consuming one thing stronger. You can additionally use the mug because the reward at a piece associated “reward change” get together to be the star of the present.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

25. Lauren HB Studio

  • Ceramicist: Lauren Herzak-Bauman
  • Location: Kingston, NY
  • What was the inspiration in your design? The shape itself was my place to begin. I envisioned taking a line for a stroll, meandering across the contours of the mug. I hope to encourage a way of psychological wandering whereas somebody sips a scorching beverage. It is about making a second of pause and reflection throughout the on a regular basis ritual of having fun with a drink.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

26. Lauren Lauzon

  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? The oranges motif is considered one of my first ever designs I placed on a mug nearly six years in the past. For this mission, it felt actually becoming to nod to my beginnings as a ceramicist, whereas additionally that includes considered one of my newer deal with kinds.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

27. Misplaced Quarry

  • Ceramicist: Doris Josovitz
  • Location: New York
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? I really like that my mugs could be artwork items—they’re good for styling on a shelf and even for sensible makes use of like holding pens and pencils on a desk. Within the rest room, they work properly to maintain toothbrushes and toothpaste organized. In my studio, I exploit my pattern mugs to carry ceramic instruments.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

28. Meltz Studio

  • Ceramicist: Alexandra Meltzer
  • Location: Newburgh, NY
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? The inexperienced coloration of the brushstrokes had been created utilizing one thing known as copper wash. The copper utilized in ceramic colorants and the copper used to make pennies is similar aspect utilized in completely different varieties.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

29. Mondays

  • Ceramicist: Jennifer Fiore
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • What was the inspiration in your design? There’s a mug within the Etruscan Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork that’s so good and easy and timeless. It was made hundreds of years in the past however manages to really feel totally up to date. I would like all of my work to have that very same high quality of not being clearly positioned in time or following a pattern.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

30. Mondays

  • Ceramicist: Nina Lalli
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? My mug is heavy! Some folks could choose an alternate use. It is nice as a small vase, pencil holder, smoothie or milkshake cup (with a straw). It might even be a planter, with some pebbles within the backside to assist drainage, or cute as a utensil holder on the dinner desk or buffet.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

31. Mud Witch

  • Ceramicist: Viviana Matsuda
  • Location: San Francisco, CA
  • What was the most important problem of designing this mug? I wished one thing playful and useful. I like my mugs to seem like they’re part of a cartoon. I wished the deal with to be like a big donut however I needed to make the deal with hole or the mug can be too heavy. I needed to throw it on the wheel then make a plaster mould to pour a skinny layer of slip so the deal with can be light-weight.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

32. Myrth Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Abigail Smallwood
  • Location: Windfall, RI
  • What was the inspiration in your design? Our mug design was impressed by the gorgeous cascading gentle in our new studio in Windfall, RI. Diagonal rays of sunshine bathe our studio’s east-facing home windows and this makes it a very pretty place to work day-after-day. The sunshine rays additionally reminded us of the feel of our Moon Vase so we mixed the 2 concepts in a diagonal hand-carved floor on our mug.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

33. Objet Aimee

  • Ceramicist: Aimee McLaughlin
  • Location: Portland, ME
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? That stoneware clay was invented roughly 1,250,447 days in the past (1400 BCE) and this stoneware mug was invented roughly 64 days in the past (September 2024).

Photograph by Armando Rafael

34. Pepper Stone Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Anna Richardson
  • Location: Charlottesville, VA
  • What was the inspiration in your design? I really like a classic French Stripe—the sample is timeless. However I wished to convey a extra relaxed tone to that with the imperfect, painterly fashion of the stripes that I believe provides a degree of cozy.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

35. Private Greatest

  • Ceramicist: Whitney Simpkins
  • Location: Baltimore, MD
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? I really like utilizing this measurement mug for an enormous scoop of ice cream. I’ve additionally been identified to water the vegetation in my kitchen by filling a random mug from the cupboard.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

36. Pigeon Toe

  • Ceramicist: Sam Hough
  • Location: Portland, OR
  • What was the inspiration in your design? The ’70s! Pottery was stuffed with heat tones, natural floor design, and fascinating textures. We began with a custom-made brown clay, and contrasted it with bursts of melted glass crystals blended into an off-white glaze.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

37. Recreation Heart

  • Ceramicist: Josephine Heilpern
  • Location: New York, NY
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? I like to make use of my mugs for consuming broth within the morning. However outdoors of consuming something you should use the mug to amplify sound! I imply it isn’t its foremost intention however oftentimes, after I’m within the kitchen cooking, I place my cellphone inside a mug to make my music louder. I suppose it is possibly time I purchase myself some audio system.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

38. Rory Pots

  • Ceramicist: Rory Shamlian
  • Location: Burlington, VT
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? It was made in a studio in Burlington, Vermont by a really small staff of girls, a couple of blocks away from Lake Champlain, prone to the sound of a real crime podcast.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

39. Ruth Easterbrook

  • Location: Philadelphia, PA
  • What was the most important problem of designing this mug? I throw every cup from a lump of clay so getting the scale and/or proportions the identical every time is a problem. Slight variation is inherently a part of the handmade course of however I’m proud of how comparable they turned out.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

40. Sarah Cihat

  • Ceramicist: Sarah Grant
  • Location: Nashville, TN
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? I’d positively use it for ice cream, as I don’t like an enormous large bowl of it. They’re additionally nice for snacks like nuts or olives and will match simply on a snack/charcuterie board, so remember to purchase multiples!

Photograph by Armando Rafael

41. Sombra

  • Ceramicist: Allison Shawn
  • Location: Los Angeles, CA
  • What was the most important problem of designing this mug? Balancing texture, type, and performance was key to making a minimalist however distinctive mug. I wished a floor that invitations contact with out being too coarse, making a texture that’s earthy but refined; I sought to make sure a secure, stackable type that is snug to carry; and I wished to take away any extraneous components from the making course of. Discovering that equilibrium took time, but it surely’s what makes every bit really feel so inviting.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

42. Stone & Sparrow

  • Ceramicist: Kate Marchand
  • Location: Pittsburgh, PA
  • What was the inspiration in your design? The inspiration for my design was actually a matter of trial and error. I got here up with this design whereas growing a sequence of items for an area espresso store with a motorbike theme (suppose Deus Ex Machina vibes). Whereas growing one thing complementary to a “grease-spot” theme, I attempted a number of illustration patterns on the mug physique surfaces. This one caught!

Photograph by Armando Rafael

43. Studiolo Artale

  • Ceramicist: Isabella Artale
  • Location: Union Metropolis, NJ
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? Since we’re in soup season, I believe this mug makes for an ideal “bowl.” You get the perform of a vessel, however with the added ergonomics of a deal with! Plus the peak of the mug wall is sweet for preserving the soup hotter for longer.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

44. Studio Joo

  • Ceramicist: Elaine Tian
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • What was the inspiration in your design? My mug is a Japanese chawan-style bowl. After an inspiring go to to Japan in 2012, I took some tea ceremony courses on the Urasenke Chanoyu Heart in NYC. My work has been steeped within the wabi-sabi custom since. Enjoyable Reality: Urasenke Chanoyu Heart is positioned within the former studio and residential of Mark Rothko. They’ve a Zen rock backyard, and among the most beautiful tea rooms outdoors of Japan. I extremely suggest a go to!

Photograph by Armando Rafael

45. Sunday Studio

  • Ceramicist: Joanne Lee
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • What was the most important problem of designing this mug? I do not often make mugs so touchdown on the precise measurement was a problem, to make it large enough however not too large. Clay shrinks about 12-15%, so one thing that appears the precise measurement when it is freshly thrown can find yourself being kiddie-sized as soon as it is gone by means of the ultimate firing.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

46. This Quiet Mud

  • Ceramicist: Dubhe Carreno
  • Location: Lake Forest, IL
  • Aside from consuming espresso or tea, what’s one other approach somebody might use your mug? I really love my new mug design as a flower vase as a result of it may possibly choose up the colour of any flower in addition to the greens of the leaves. I believe it will additionally make an superior brush holder or small utensil holder for shorter gadgets like measuring spoons, vegetable peeler, pizza cutter, and so forth.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

47. Utility Objects

  • Ceramicist: Aleisha Duchateau
  • Location: Atlanta, GA
  • What was the inspiration in your design? Industrial soil compactors. When you see one you will know.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

48. Void & Kind

  • Ceramicist: Natalie Legg
  • Location: Denver, CO
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it?
    That is powerful as a result of I left this mug nearly solely naked as a way to see the colour of the clay itself. However, one factor somebody most likely would not know is that this mug was created from clay I recycled in my studio.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

49. Wilcoxson Brooklyn Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Kevin Wilcoxson
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • What was the inspiration in your design? The inspiration was celebration, confetti, shiny colours and easy pleasure.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

50. Wolf Ceramics

  • Ceramicist: Sarah Wolf
  • Location: Hood River, OR
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it?
    Whereas I used to be throwing these on the wheel I used to be—most likely—listening to Harry Potter on tape. It is a custom yearly within the studio. As soon as it will get darkish and wet and manufacturing begins ramping up for the vacations, we begin listening to the sequence from the start.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

51. Wonki Ware

  • Ceramicist: Wonki Ware
  • Location: Western Cape, South Africa
  • What we love about this mug: It belongs on the eating desk of your fanciest banquet, the nook of your workplace desk, and all over the place in between.

Photograph by Armando Rafael

52. Daniel Zunino

  • Ceramicist: Daniel Zunino
  • Location: Brooklyn, NY
  • What’s one thing about your mug that somebody wouldn’t know simply by taking a look at it? I spent a number of months growing a {custom} glaze for this piece, persevering with to iterate and take a look at so as to land on the colour and texture I used to be after.


Which ceramicist ought to we work with subsequent yr? Tell us within the feedback under!

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