




What kind of drinker are you?
Every Vessel piece is thrown on the wheel, fired in a wood kiln, and signed on the bottom with the maker's mark. Tell us how you drink — we'll find your match.
Let the objects
speak for themselves.
Craft isn't a luxury. It's a daily practice. Here's what you hold in your hand — every morning, every trail, every table.

Ember Yunomi
"The asymmetry is intentional — your thumb finds the same spot every morning."
— Noa, Vessel Studio
Factory Ceramic Mug
No maker. No story. No signature.

Trail Flask — Borosilicate
"You can see the breath of the glassblower in the slight irregularity of the rim."
— Remi, Vessel Glass Workshop
Plastic Sport Bottle
No maker. No story. No signature.

Solstice Carafe
"No two carafes from the same firing look alike. The copper moves in the kiln."
— Noa, Vessel Studio

Branded Glass Carafe
No maker. No story. No signature.
Every piece is signed.
Here's who signs it.
Three makers. One studio. Every piece carries a maker's mark and firing date on the base — so you always know the story.
Noa Abramowitz
Clay Thrower & Kiln Master"The weight of a piece is its first conversation with you. I throw every wall thick enough that you feel it — not heavy, just present."

Remi Okonkwo
Glass Blower"Glass remembers breath. Every flask I blow carries a tiny irregularity at the rim — that's where I was standing, what I was thinking."

Suki Tanaka
Glaze Chemist & Finisher"A glaze is a recipe that only the kiln can finish. I write the formula — the fire writes the result."
Every base tells a story
The cup shapes
the experience.
"I've tried every specialty mug. This one changed my morning. The clay keeps the espresso warm differently — something about the thermal mass. My Chemex pours taste better now. I genuinely can't explain it."

"We put the Solstice Carafe on our registry as a long shot. Three guests went in on it together. It sits on our table every dinner. Guests ask about it before they ask about the food."
"My hydration content doubled in engagement the week I switched to the Trail Flask. The light does something with the glass I've never seen from a product. But honestly the real reason I keep using it is it just feels right in my hand."
"I've been collecting tea ware for eleven years. Vessel's ash gaiwan is the first piece I've bought where I didn't need to know the price first. The glaze has depth that photographs can't capture."

Your vessel is
waiting to be found.
Every factory tumbler in your cabinet is about to feel like a stranger. Take the five-question quiz — we'll find your match from the current firing.