SKU: 2136

Bowl Gysinge small

EUR24.81

Available in central stock
Quick facts

Additional information

Weight N/A
STRL

Small

Color

White, Gray

Beautiful hand-turned bowl in white or gray. The height is 8 cm, diameter 17 cm. The glaze is also made by hand, hence the beautiful shimmering surface.

Description

Beautiful hand-turned bowl in white or gray. The height is 8 cm, diameter 17 cm. The glaze is also made by hand, hence the beautiful shimmering surface.

Additional information

Weight N/A
STRL

Small

Color

White, Gray

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Napkin in “poor man’s suit”. Robust napkins for everyday and festive use.

Until the 1980s, Gysinge was a nursing home run by the county council. To create employment for the 60 or so mentally ill people who stayed at the home, there was, among other things, a weaving room. Many of the inmates spent a long time in the weaving room, which gave them a more meaningful existence – and the county council a cash injection.

At the home, real fabrics were woven, not therapy work in the modern, negative sense. For example, all the curtains, tablecloths and napkins were woven for the reopening of Gysinge Manor in the 1960s.

This fabric is a so-called sole weave (the pattern looks like a sole – but only appears after washing!), woven to order for a guesthouse in Järvsö in the 60s.

The weaving method is also called poor man’s cloth, a weaving method that produced a fabric that looks much more exclusive than it really is. The weaving method is very old and produces a highly absorbent and durable fabric. The fabric is most beautiful if you mangle it, then the shiny linen threads in the weft are emphasized, against the duller warp of cotton. The quality only becomes more beautiful the more you wear the fabric.

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Plate, platter

Rococo-style plate made by hand, especially for Gysinge. The plates are made of thin, strong stoneware and glazed by hand in a beige-white 18th-century glaze with a glossy, vibrant and changing surface. The plates are available in three models, flat, deep and plate.

Facts
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Before flowerpot production became an industry in Sweden around the turn of the century 1900, there were a number of potters who made flowerpots, among other things. Typical of their handmade pots is that you can see the imprints of the potter’s hands in the ware. The hand-turning process produces low ridges on the surface that are visible both inside and out.

A hand-turned pot is not as rigid as a machine pot, it is more personal and has more life and variety. A detail that also reveals the real craftsmanship is the soft, rounded edge at the top. It can certainly be made by machine, but it will never be as soft and individual as on a hand-turned pot.

Gysinge’s small lion pots also have two lion mascots on the chest, a common decoration in the early 19th century.

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True agave is a Mediterranean plant that in our climate requires greenhouses in winter. For this reason, it has also only been found on wealthier farms with orangeries or other means of frost-free winter storage.

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Alongside the genuine agaves, there have also been imitations in painted black plate.

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