Wabi-Sabi style

Wabi-Sabi — In Praise of Imperfection

Born from wood and time, these turned wooden bowls, dishes, and pots embody the essence of the Japanese Wabi-Sabi aesthetic: the beauty of imperfection, the grace of the ephemeral, the serenity of simplicity.

Each piece carries the marks of its former life — a knot that tells of a branch, a crack filled with natural resin, a grain line that meanders like a stream. Nothing is hidden. Everything is revealed.

The forms are organic, slightly asymmetrical, never perfectly round — like nature itself. The surface retains the memory of the lathe, the chisel, the hand. The wood is not tamed; it is listened to.

The finish is understated, almost absent: a natural oil that nourishes without masking, that allows the material to breathe. No artificial shine, no forced symmetry. Just the wood in its truth.

Placing one of these objects on a table is an invitation to slowness. It is choosing what lasts because it is true, not because it is perfect.

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