A bowl suggests a certain pace. It holds, gathers, balances heat or chill, invites a closer way of eating. This collection includes pieces shaped for specific dishes—broths, grains, salads, sides—or none at all. Deep or shallow, wide-lipped or tightly curved, each form answers to a different rhythm of use. You’ll find glazed porcelain, unpolished stoneware, hand-thrown forms with subtle irregularities. Some stack neatly; others want space around them. All are made to be held, filled, and returned to the table again and again—objects that live easily between kitchen and dining room, ritual and improvisation.