Beginner Ceramics

Handmade Ceramic Shapes Mug

$80
Handmade Ceramic Shapes Mug
Beginner Ceramics

Handmade Ceramic Shapes Mug

$80
Free Standard Shipping on Orders $199+
Heads Up!

This piece comes via All Fired Up, a very special, limited collection of handmade ceramics, only available at Food52. (And because it’s handmade, some variation is to be expected and embraced.)

Sunshine in a mug

You’re guaranteed to have a bright morning anytime you reach for this mug. It gets its vibrant design from Brooklyn-based artist Jesse Hamerman, who uses a wax etching technique to make those expressive brushstrokes intrinsic to the form. It’s a lengthy process (but well worth the effort, if you ask us).

  • Wheel-thrown and hand-formed ceramic
  • Crafted in a small Brooklyn studio
  • Exclusively at Food52
  • Made in: Brooklyn, NY
  • Product Warranty:
  • Shipping & Returns: Free Standard Shipping on Orders $199+ and Easy-Breezy Returns

You’re guaranteed to have a bright morning anytime you reach for this mug. It gets its vibrant design from Brooklyn-based artist Jesse Hamerman, who uses a wax etching technique to make those expressive brushstrokes intrinsic to the form. It’s a lengthy process (but well worth the effort, if you ask us).

  • Wheel-thrown and hand-formed ceramic
  • Crafted in a small Brooklyn studio
  • Exclusively at Food52

Sunshine in a mug

You’re guaranteed to have a bright morning anytime you reach for this mug. It gets its vibrant design from Brooklyn-based artist Jesse Hamerman, who uses a wax etching technique to make those expressive brushstrokes intrinsic to the form. It’s a lengthy process (but well worth the effort, if you ask us).

  • Wheel-thrown and hand-formed ceramic
  • Crafted in a small Brooklyn studio
  • Exclusively at Food52
  • Made in: Brooklyn, NY
  • Product Warranty:
  • Shipping & Returns: Free Standard Shipping on Orders $199+ and Easy-Breezy Returns

You’re guaranteed to have a bright morning anytime you reach for this mug. It gets its vibrant design from Brooklyn-based artist Jesse Hamerman, who uses a wax etching technique to make those expressive brushstrokes intrinsic to the form. It’s a lengthy process (but well worth the effort, if you ask us).

  • Wheel-thrown and hand-formed ceramic
  • Crafted in a small Brooklyn studio
  • Exclusively at Food52