Frozen bubble suspended inside clear borosilicate glass, magnified close-up showing spherical perfection
Celadon glaze crackle pattern magnified to reveal satellite-terrain-like surface topography
Molten glass being shaped on a blowpipe, orange-hot with radiating heat distortion
Geometric glass panel refracting light into prismatic spectrum across studio floor
Ceramic surface with deep matte glaze showing micro-texture under raking studio light
Cast glass block with internal inclusions creating depth like frozen tidal water
Kiln interior glowing orange-red at peak temperature, ceramic vessels silhouetted inside

Kiln Studio · Est. 2026

Hand-blown and algorithmically finished glass and ceramic — objects that change the light in a room.

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Process & Philosophy
Material Philosophy

Glass remembers every degree.

Bubble frozen mid-rise inside clear glass vessel, light catching the curved interior wall
Celadon glaze crackle pattern under macro lens, each crack a precise fracture map
Method

Twelve hours in the kiln. Four seconds to know.

Glassblower gathering molten glass on iron blowpipe, orange glow against dark studio
Large-format glass installation panel refracting afternoon light into spectral bands across concrete floor
Conviction

We will not ship anything that does not change the light in a room.

Deep matte ceramic surface with micro-texture visible under controlled raking light
Cast glass block with layered internal inclusions, depth like frozen water
Scale

From a collector's shelf to a building's skin — the material asks the same question.

Kiln interior at peak firing temperature, ceramic forms silhouetted in orange heat
Raw ceramic clay coil detail showing hand-building technique before firing
Selected Works

Objects that earn their space.

Each piece is made once. The edition is the object — not a run.

Clear glass vessel with internal bubble formation, polished base reflecting studio light

Blown borosilicate

Void Series No. 3

2026

Architectural glass partition panel with geometric surface treatment casting prismatic shadows

Cast float glass

Partition Study — Refraction

2026

Matte ceramic vessel with layered ash glaze, surface resembling weathered industrial material

Stoneware, ash glaze

Annealing Form I

2026

Cast glass block with internal layering creating tidal depth and aqueous visual weight

Cast optical glass

Sediment Block

2026

Blown glass luminaire pendant, interior surface etched to diffuse light uniformly

Blown + etched glass

Luminaire 04

2026

Celadon glazed ceramic panel detail, crackle pattern magnified showing fracture topology

Porcelain, celadon glaze

Crackle Study — Celadon

2026

Functional glass sculpture on plinth, light refracting through angled cut faces

Cold-worked crystal

Cut Geometry No. 1

2026

Process detail of glass being slumped over ceramic mold, surface tension visible

Sheet glass, ceramic mold

Slump Study

2026

Studio Position
01

Material is not a medium — it is a collaborator.

We listen to what the glass wants to do before we impose form.

02

Algorithmic precision does not replace the hand. It disciplines it.

Every surface treatment is computed, then executed by a person who has spent a decade learning to fail correctly.

03

If it photographs well but disappoints in person, it fails.

Our work is made for rooms, not feeds.

04

Limited edition. Limited list.

We produce what we can make without compromise. That number is small by design.

First Firing · 2026

Join the First Firing.

Limited edition. Limited list. No launch date promised — only the work, when it is ready.

247 people already on the list.

No launch date. No timeline. Only the work, when it is ready.