Our Members
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Emily Proctor
Emily’s hand-built ceramics celebrate the raw beauty of coarse stoneware, natural tones, and ancient techniques. Her sculptural, tactile functional pieces embrace imperfection. Tool marks are left visible, honouring the handmade and the process behind each form.
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Rachel Hampson
Rachel is a potter from the Staffordshire Moorlands, near the heart of the Potteries, with family connections to the pottery industry. She makes wheel-thrown stoneware tableware. Rachel’s work is inspired by the local landscape and her time living in South-East Asia in the 1990s
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Helena Coan
Helena makes her ceramics on the pottery wheel but always prioritises the singularity of each piece, embracing the charm of the organic material rather than making identical sets. Her work has a robust and durable feel, to be used in everyday life, but is designed to feel distinctive and special.
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Stephanie Webs
Stephanie is an architect who enjoys making simple, elegant ceramics with an organic, hand-built character. Her well-proportioned vessels show precise craftsmanship and attention to detail, often using iron-speckled clay, carved textures, or gentle deformations to create natural variation and interest.
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Ella Dee
Ella’s pieces are inspired mostly by animals, with a mix of sculpted pieces and illustrated work. Highlighting a more cartoonish cutesy style to the work, boasting colours and fun throughout.
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Amy Hutton
Amy makes wheel-thrown ceramics focused on form and function. Designed to be handled and enjoyed, each piece pairs simple shapes with rich, layered glazes that bring a quiet sense of luxury to daily rituals.
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Ian Fusco Fagg
Ian has spent many years in graphic and web design. Now, he's embracing a more tactile journey with handmade ceramics. Experimenting with throwing and hand- building whilst exploring glazes and forms.
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Ersoy Emin
Ersoy’s background in editorial design has strongly influenced his transition into ceramics. His work is characterised by the use of slab and coil-building techniques, drawing inspiration from mid-century design, African art, and brutalist architecture.
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Rosie Ruddock
Rosie is a North London potter creating elegant, functional ceramics in wheel-thrown porcelain and stoneware. Inspired by the sea, her glazes in soft blues and greens contrast beautifully with white porcelain. Simple forms and subtle textures give her work a calm, natural character, perfect for everyday use.
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Sharleen Spangler
Sharleen, a German ceramicist and designer, creates elegant, functional pots using stoneware and porcelain. She celebrates raw materials by leaving exposed clay. Her porcelain range features colourful, hand-painted abstract designs that contrast beautifully with her natural stoneware finishes.
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Diana Gold
Hand-crafted, one-of-a-kind ceramics that transform sketchbook doodles into distinctive stoneware or porcelain objects. Each piece proudly bears the maker’s mark, celebrating irregularities and quirks as part of its handmade charm. The result is a playful, characterful collection that brings sketches to life in three-dimensional form.
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Inma Pol Buades
Inma creates unique, free-hand painted pottery inspired by geometry, color, and variation. Each piece has its own personality and one off design. Playful, vibrant and functional, her work brings joy and character to everyday rituals, especially when sharing a meal.
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Janet Stewart
Janet discovered ceramics later in life and became devoted to hand-building. She especially loves working with paper porcelain, creating highly decorated pieces inspired by her lifelong interest in European art and design.
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MELNIK
Let’s not take this too seriously.
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Skogslänta Ceramics
Josefin Arneskog is a Swedish ceramicist and landscape architect behind Skogsglänta. Inspired by the landscapes of her childhood she enjoys exploring textures and translating the raw beauty of natural materials into her pieces. Her wheel thrown vases are designed to celebrate the interplay between form and nature
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Lewis Bailey
Lewis founded Waxhead Ceramics to unite his passion for pottery and aromatherapy. His functional ceramics reflect a process-led, experimental approach, where no two pieces are identical. Waxhead hand-pours natural aromatherapy candles with carefully blended essential oils designed for their grounding, therapeutic benefits as well as their scent.
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Madeleine Garcia Munzer
Maddie is a designer and part-time ceramicist. Through Puffin Ceramics, she creates playful one-of-a-kind pieces infused with curiosity, colour, and creative exploration. She marries imperfection with functionality, while celebrating her Colombian heritage and the joy of handmade craft.
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Mary Newell Price
Mary creates handbuilt and wheel-thrown functional ceramics, with surfaces that evoke natural landscapes. Through textured mark making and layered glazes, her work captures the richness and depth of organic forms, inviting tactile engagement and everyday use.
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Rob Goate
Rob Goate makes wheel thrown and hand-built ceramics in his relentless pursuit to create decorative objects using unusual techniques and glasses.
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Roselind Hunsel
Roselind is a London-based artist whose ceramic sculptures balance geometric precision and organic fluidity. Informed by her multicultural heritage and fashion background, each hand-built and hand-painted piece is an intuitive exploration of identity, transformation, and ancestral connection through form, texture, and colour.
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Rosie Ifould
Working under the name Fat Sparrow Ceramics (a name chosen as a nod to the ‘fat sparrows’ of Japanese netsuke), Rosie Ifould creates everyday objects inspired by people she knows and the things they treasure. Her work is mostly wheel-thrown, functional ware and she is interested in exploring alternative firing techniques.
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Seda Sokmen
Seda creates functional and sculptural pottery through hand-building and wheel-throwing. She experiments with colourful gradients, carving, and rich textures, blending craft and art with a playful, exploratory spirit.
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Serena Bellorti
Serena considers decorating the pieces she creates a vital part of her artistic process, allowing her to translate her inner world into vivid landscapes of colour and form. She uses techniques like sgraffito and paper resist to decorate her pottery, drawing inspiration from the natural world and the rhythmic beauty of patterns found in everyday objects.