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Pottery & Wooden Tableware

Edwards Smith Fine Woodworking

www.edwardssmithfinewoodworking.com

I am a self-taught woodturner.  I don’t buy wood but use what others don’t want and use trees native to the area. So, I am a wood recycler.  People give me
wood. I hate to see a precious gift from nature go to waste.  My interest is in good design and fine finishes.

Blue Moon Pottery

www.bluemoonpotteryvt.com

Blue Moon Pottery creates functional stoneware pottery with the intent that it be used and enjoyed. Our Inspiration comes from the environment around us. Vermont is a great place for natural inspiration with its rolling hills, fall colors, and snowy winters. Many items are decorated with leaves, snowflakes, trees, and flowers.

After 35 years teaching English, Toby Fulwiler ("Fairfield Farm Bowls") now makes hardwood bowls and kitchen implements from local sugar and red maple, white ash, black cherry, and red birch. He obtains wood for turning on his 90-acre Fairfield property as well as from neighbors and local loggers. All Fairfield Farm products are functional, aesthetically pleasing, and smooth to the touch  Many small bowls are turned with natural edges (some bark remaining on the rim) to suggest the wood’s origin in the Vermont landscape and are ideal for spices, jewelry, coins, paperclips, etc. All are sealed with a food-safe beeswax finish.

Linda B's pottery is unique for both its rich deep colors, and its comfortable hand. Linda's coffee and soup mugs cradle perfectly in the hand, warm and comforting.  In 1993, Linda and her husband moved to a farmhouse in Vermont, spent three years refurbishing  the barn which now houses her studio.  Linda's work graces homes all over the country... and has even been seen on the coffee table of "Primetime Live."

Elizabeth Martin Pottery

http://www.elizabethmartinpottery.com

Elizabeth Martin is a potter working from her home studio in Richford Vermont.  She uses both stoneware and earthenware clay to create functional pottery intended for everyday use.  Her simple forms have an organic feel and and she often relies on a clear glaze to allow the natural beauty of the clay to shine through.
 

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