Checked garden mug
Checked garden mug
Cozy vibes: This mug has the feeling of a garden in the earliest part of spring, when everything is still soft and nothing has fully opened yet. The blue and pink together are gentle without being timid, the colors of good stationery and first blooms and mornings that haven't gotten warm yet. Fill it with something light, a floral tea, a milky coffee, and sit somewhere bright. It is the kind of mug that makes the day feel like it has potential.
A fine grid of pale blue lines is painted across the entire surface, loose and slightly irregular the way hand-drawn lines always are, giving the mug the quality of graph paper or a garden plan sketched out on a quiet afternoon. Scattered across the grid, small pink blossoms are painted in clusters of three and four, each one with delicate blue-tipped stamens at the center. The flowers sit inside the grid without following it, drifting freely across the surface as if they landed there on their own. The whole effect is airy and considered at once, a pattern that looks simple until you look closely. Designed to hold ~260 ml (9 oz) comfortably.
Each of our handmade ceramics are made by independent artists in small batches.
Handmade ceramics carry the marks of their making. Variations in color, texture, and form reflect the artist’s process. Each piece is shaped by hand, just once, and in its own way, making it uniquely yours.
About the artisan: Qirawan is a ceramic artist based in Jordan whose work brings a sense of joy to everyday rituals. Each piece is shaped and finished by hand, resulting in softly dimpled forms that feel as comforting to hold as they are to look at.
Her designs are instantly recognizable for their playful yet thoughtful details, each one carefully placed to add a touch of charm without overwhelming the form. There’s an ease to her work that makes it feel both expressive and functional.
Every mug is one of a kind, carrying subtle variations that reflect the artist’s hand. The result is pottery that feels personal and lived-in from the very first use. Objects meant not just to be admired, but to become part of your daily moments of pause.




