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Hardly just Another Ceramic Candlestick, Marie Dessuant‘s playfully named candleholder set is everything most candleholders aren’t: simple, unadorned, materially warm and sophisticated and actually practical. The handle in the solid oak base recalls the candleholders of yore, in the pre-electricity days when people actually had to walk around their homes carrying candles to see where they were going. Dessuant’s design is much more pared down than those, yet has added functionality, doubling as a holder for candles and keepsakes, making it a perfect bedside companion. You can also remove the glazed stoneware lid and use it on its own while keeping the container separate to store items.
Available next week from Another Country.
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I’ve long been a fan of Another Country’s contemporary craft furniture, especially their Series Two dining set, but they’re also a great example of how a furniture company can increase their brand visibility by selling other home products made by designers and craftsmen who share a similar aesthetic – like Ian McIntyre, for instance. Another Country debuted his tableware collection, Another Pottery Series, during London Design Week last year.
The hand-crafted collection includes a jug, plate, bowl, cup and something called a pinch pot, which gets its name from the original process, which didn’t involve a potter’s wheel, but consisted of simply pinching the wet clay together to form a small dish. All the pieces are made using a Jigger/Jolly process wherein “a piece of clay is placed into a spinning female mould and a male profile is introduced, squeezing the clay between the two surfaces. Mould and profile come together and any excess clay squeezed out by the process is trimmed off. This project,” McIntyre goes on to say, “explores the aesthetics created when the clay does not fully fill the moulds.”
More specifically, “the jug is slip cast and made of Terracotta which has been fired to an unconventionally high temperature that vitrifies the body of the clay giving it the strength of stoneware and achieving the scorched colour. The pinch pot is black stoneware, the bowl, cup and plate are sandy stonewares. The clay shapes are pressed on these machines and then fettled, dipped in glaze, fired and polished.”
Right now only the pitcher ($79) and pinch pot ($21.50) are available for sale online to US markets.
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