Crawl Glaze
Introducing a limited release line of vessels in Crawl Glaze featuring Night Swim interiors. Add the drama of texture with this otherworldly collection of utility vessels and household objects that feel just as mysteriously compelling as they appear.
Made in Asheville, NC.
![Three white ceramic vessels in Small, Medium, and Big with cracked texture and the interior being dark teal. Artfully arranged in a moody studio setting.](https://cdn.sanity.io/images/be6sw5hj/production/37f3226295d46295ccb428c73bea9f3618decee7-1600x1280.jpg?h=320&q=80&fit=max&auto=format)
Introducing a limited release line of vessels in Crawl Glaze featuring Night Swim interiors. Add the drama of texture with this otherworldly collection of utility vessels and household objects that feel just as mysteriously compelling as they appear.
Made in Asheville, NC.
![Five white ceramic vessels in various sizes with cracked texture and the interior being dark teal. Artfully arranged in a moody studio setting.](https://cdn.sanity.io/images/be6sw5hj/production/faea79c420fc3e8ba3fad124dfa411d60ae718ef-1600x1280.jpg?w=600&q=80&fit=max&auto=format)
Where texture meets function.
Like most things in ceramics, the crawl glaze has historic origins. Many say the earliest examples were high feldspar Shino glazes in Japan. Potters and glaze chemists with a proclivity for the strange and bizarre have been messing around with it ever since. The crawl glaze you see used today takes what is often considered a flaw and dials it up to the extreme. It’s probably the farthest from our roots we’ve traveled; it’s weird and wonderful, and feels surprisingly lovely in the hand. - Alex Matisse, CEO & Co-Founder