"No offense to a sleek white bowl, but there's something about a hand-thrown, beautifully glazed ceramic. If you're someone who flips plates mid-meal to confirm if they're Heath, or are guilty of spending an entire tax return on matching East Fork sets, you're in the right city-there are more kilns in SF than rent-controlled apartments. We spent a lot of time staring at plates (and looking up every ceramics studio in a two-mile radius of our homes) to put together this guide."
"If you're someone who flips plates mid-meal to confirm if they're Heath, or are guilty of spending an entire tax return on matching East Fork sets, you're in the right city-there are more kilns in SF than rent-controlled apartments. We spent a lot of time staring at plates (and looking up every ceramics studio in a two-mile radius of our homes) to put together this guide."
San Francisco hosts a dense concentration of ceramics studios and kilns. Many residents prefer hand-thrown, beautifully glazed ceramics over sleek, mass-produced white bowls. Plate enthusiasts often inspect pieces mid-meal to identify makers like Heath. Some buyers invest heavily in matching artisanal dinnerware, sometimes spending an entire tax return on East Fork sets. Local studio inventories reveal multiple workshops within two-mile radii of many homes. The local ceramics culture supports active potting, glazing, and a robust community of makers and collectors.
Read at The Infatuation
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