About me
Hi, I'm Wangqin and I make pottery products
With every touch, I mold raw clay into exquisite forms, infusing them with my imagination and passion. The wheel spins beneath my hands, yielding to my artistic vision. I carve, sculpt, and shape, crafting vessels that hold stories within their delicate curves.
Because these works are all handmade, the production cycle is within half a month, I will send these things to you as soon as possible, please look forward to it.
Only high-quality materials!
Red Clay
A medium-texture Etruria Marl based red terracotta body famously used to produce the Tower Poppies.
Blue Clay
A smooth, coloured earthenware ideal for modelling, jewellery making and wheel throwing.
Some of questions answered here.
A seemingly elegant design can quickly begin to bloat with unexpected content or break under the weight of actual activity. Fake data can ensure a nice looking layout but it doesn’t reflect what a living, breathing application must endure. Real data does.
Yes! We offer personalization on selected pottery pieces. You can add names, initials, short messages or special dates, and in some cases choose your preferred colors.
Custom orders usually take 5–10 extra working days to make and may include a small customization fee. Because each personalized item is hand-made just for you, we’re not able to accept returns or exchanges on custom pieces.
If you have a specific idea in mind, please contact us before ordering and we’ll let you know what’s possible.
If the copy becomes distracting in the design then you are doing something wrong or they are discussing copy changes. It might be a bit annoying but you could tell them that that discussion would be best suited for another time. At worst the discussion is at least working towards the final goal of your site where questions about lorem ipsum don’t.
Contact Me!
Address
Jingdezhen City, China
Monday - Tuesday 10.00am - 4.00pm (By Appointment Only) Wednesday - Saturday, 10.00am – 4.00pm Sunday, Closed
WhatsApp:
+86 13698486831
Customer Service