seya. "JAPANESE POTCELAINE SQUARE PLATE SET (3 PIECES) / CELADON"

Regular price ¥66,000

Celadon square plate. Ochiyama-yaki porcelain made in the Edo period.
This is a set of three square plates.
At the time, it was popular among feudal lords to have their own domain kilns for firing tea utensils.
They were made with delicate and advanced techniques, such as embossing the base material using a carved clay mold.
The kiln was abandoned during the Meiji period, but was revived in 1988, and still produces green celadon, blue and white porcelain, red porcelain and other works using the techniques of the time.

-seya.
JAPANESE POTCELAINE SQUARE PLATE SET (3 PIECES)
Color: CELADON
SIZE: 18.5×18.5×1.6
MATERIAL: PORCELAINE
Made in Japan

【seya.】
A brand created by Keiko Seya, a creative director living in Paris.
The collection is based on the concept of "travel" and incorporates special materials and is based on mineral colors.
From fashion We offer a wide range of items, from household goods to fragrances, all hand-crafted with carefully selected ingredients.
The clothes are also practical, allowing you to travel comfortably.
Non-gendered, pure and organic.
We offer relaxed elegance that transcends seasons.

[STORY
For Citizens of the World
We need to understand and empathize with people who have lived in different cultures and with different lifestyles, and think about culture and nature as the Earth's treasures, not as citizens of a country but as citizens of the world.
Every season we travel to a different place and create sophisticated items that incorporate fashion, objects and scents through our unique sensibilities.
 I want to go back to the basics and understand the reasons for the existence of things such as materials, shapes, colors, scents, sounds, etc. that have existed for a reason since ancient times in the natural environment of various places around the world .
I hope that the important cultures and techniques of each region, which are being forgotten due to capitalism, will be preserved.
We want to take initiatives that consider our precious natural environment and culture, rather than fast fashion which has become nothing more than a consumer item that changes every season, fashion as an industrial industry, or miscellaneous goods that focus on commercialism .
That's where it all began.