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STUDIO ARHOJ
Studio Arhoj creates unique and affordable objects that explore the relationship between Scandinavian simplicity and traditional Japanese culture. Arhoj seeks to keep original processes and knowledge alive by utilising old crafts such as wheel throwing and glaze construction.
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Goodhood Lifestore Mugs are one of those easy, quietly brilliant gifts that feel personal without trying too hard. Designed in-house and printed with our signature graphics, they turn the everyday ritual of making a brew into a small moment of joy. Sturdy enough for the morning caffeine hit, good-looking enough to live permanently on a desk, and playful enough to spark a smile, they’re the kind of present people actually use.
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Charlotte Manser Ceramics are those rare handmade pieces that feel instantly personal tactile, weighty, quietly expressive. Wheel-thrown in her UK studio, each mug holds subtle variations in glaze and form, making every one a small one-of-a-kind artwork disguised as an everyday object. They elevate tea breaks, slow mornings and late-night wind-downs with a sense of calm ritual.
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Brutes Ceramics brings a bolder energy to the table with chunky silhouettes, expressive textures, and simple glazing that is reserved yet impactful. Each mug is a one-off conversation starter: tactile, sculptural, a little unruly in the best way.
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Sheffield-based Pottery West brings a quiet, grounded beauty to the everyday through its hand-thrown stoneware. Working in small batches, the duo focuses on tactile glazes and calming, earthy palettes that echo the raw materials they work with. Their forms are deliberately minimal and functional shapes refined through repetition with each piece still holding the subtle nuances of the maker’s hand.
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Studio Arhoj brings a dose of Copenhagen meets Tokyo whimsy to the everyday ritual. Each mug is wheel-thrown or cast in-house, then glazed by hand in the brand’s signature lava drips, candy colours, and moody washes. No two pieces are ever the same, the charm is in the unpredictability.
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Rooted in the quiet rhythms of the Norfolk coast, Eleanor Torbati’s stoneware pieces bring the philosophy of slow living into everyday use. Working from her studio in Norwich, she hand-throws minimal, functional forms inspired by North Norfolk’s muted landscapes, expect soft horizons, sand-worn textures, and shifting tides.
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Born from a desire to return to making with her hands, Silverceramics is the work of a self-taught potter who swapped the fast pace of fashion for the slower, more intentional world of clay. Crafted in a small garden studio in Hertfordshire, her pieces blend natural tones, exposed clay and textural glazes
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Danny's work revolves around transforming simple materials into vibrant, playful ceramics that encapsulate influences from traditional tattooing, the American West and quirky illustrations, all embodied into the eclectic work seen at the Mud Shop.
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Goodhood UK 15 Hanbury Street London, London E1 6QR
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