A Quiet Composition of Form and Balance
This set of three celadon vases brings a sense of rhythm and calm into a space.
Each piece varies slightly in height and proportion, allowing for a natural, balanced arrangement.
Inspired by Longquan Celadon
Finished in a soft green glaze, the surface reflects the understated elegance of traditional celadon ceramics.
Smooth, muted, and quietly luminous.
Designed for Stillness
- Display together as a sculptural set
- Use individually across different spaces
- Perfect for dried branches or minimal arrangements
Minimal Form, Lasting Presence
The clean silhouette and gentle curves allow the vases to exist without noise —
adding depth without overwhelming the room.
For Calm, Considered Spaces
Ideal for interiors that value simplicity, texture, and quiet details.
A subtle anchor in any setting.
Shipping & Care
- Carefully packed with protective materials
- Handle with care due to ceramic nature
- Clean with a dry or slightly damp cloth
Set of 3 · Soft celadon glaze · Minimalist decorative objects
Gallery Price: $169
Your Price: $125
No middlemen. Direct from the artisan workshop.
The crackle isn't damage. It's the glaze breathing — expanding and contracting over centuries, writing its own diary.
The Maker
Master Chen shapes celadon the way his grandfather did — by hand, on a wheel, with no measuring tools. He says the clay tells him when to stop. He's been listening for thirty years.
The Place
Longquan, Zhejiang. The town has been making celadon for 1,600 years. There are Song Dynasty shards in the riverbed. The locals don't even notice them anymore.
The Craft
The crackle pattern comes from a deliberate mismatch: the glaze shrinks faster than the body as it cools. In the kiln at 1,280°C, the glaze melts like honey over the stoneware. When it cools, it fractures into a network of fine lines — called "ice crackle" in Chinese. Over months and years of use, tea oils seep into the cracks, staining them amber. The vase literally ages with you.
At Home
A single branch. One dried flower. That's all it needs. Place it on a windowsill where the light shifts through the day, and watch the glaze change color — bluish in morning, warm green by afternoon.
No middlemen. Direct from the artisan workshop.