Welcome to
Ceramics for Home
Coming soon
Stories inspired by the rhythm of everyday life
a changing shadow
the curve of a petal
the movement of water
a feeling, a thought
the texture of porcelain
a handmade object
the warmth and scent of freshly baked bread
the joy of gathering around a table
Iโve always made sense of the world with my hands
Welcome to
a place where thoughts take shape
Here you will find:
Iโve always made sense of the world with my hands
Creating is the way I give back all that life keeps giving me. Somehow, it transforms along the way into something new.
Thatโs where every piece begins. Not with an idea of what it should become, but with a curiosity about what it already wants to be.
Flow is the state I found myself in the first time I touched porcelain. Itโs also where raiars was born.
It began with a curiosity. I wanted to understand how porcelain was different from clay, so I made something small โ a ring.
I loved that ring. I wore it all the time. People noticed it and asked about it. I got so excited that I kept making more.
The pieces that followed were nowhere near as successful. But it didnโt matter anymore. That first ring had already shown me what was possible, and I couldnโt stop wondering how far I could go if I kept learning.
Somewhere in between, a new dream quietly appeared.
What if I made porcelain jewellery?
As soon as I started modelling porcelain, everything around me became quiet.
Hours disappeared.
I always wanted just a little more time at my worktable.
Thatโs where this collection found its name.
Flow.
Looking back, I think I had been carrying so much uncreated work inside me. Porcelain became the place where it could finally begin to take shape.
Ideas started flowing. What I gather from everyday life keeps transforming into what my hands create. It finds its way back into the world in a new form.
For me, this has become the most natural way of giving shape to what I carry within.
I wanted to understand the material well enough to let it become anything, and it became everything.
Everything that fascinates me, draws me in, and sometimes even obsesses me: shapes, shadows, flowers, the movement of water, the Rhine at sunset, the bending of a leaf in the wind, a thought I keep returning to.
When I work on a new piece, I often begin without a rigid plan. Maybe with an idea, but always with enough freedom to let the material surprise me.
Every piece is shaped entirely by hand from porcelain clay. I donโt use moulds, which makes each piece truly unique.
I let the porcelain dry a little, then I begin carving, using sponges, brushes, and a few other simple tools. When you work with clay, almost anything can become a tool.
From there, I keep paying attention to what the material can do in that particular moment โ depending on its moisture, the temperature in the room, and the way it responds.
I donโt want to force it too quickly into a certain shape. I try to listen first, to work with it rather than against it. I let it guide me in the beginning before I take control and refine the details.
I often think itโs a beautiful philosophy for life, too.
Each piece is then fired twice โ first at 960ยฐC and then at 1240ยฐC โ a process that vitrifies the porcelain, making it both delicate and remarkably strong. Some pieces undergo a third firing when I apply 24k colloidal gold or platinum, permanently fused with the porcelain during the final firing.
Some resemble flowers. Others remind me of waves or water. Some hold a feeling captured in porcelain.
I believe all these shapes are the result of letting myself remain in awe and of paying attention.
The more I create, the more I realise that nothing I truly notice is ever wasted.
We spend years loving flowers, photography, nature, textures, light, beautiful objectsโฆ without knowing why.
Then one day, they all flow together.
This collection is what happened when mine did.
Flow continues with every new piece I make.
I hope these jewelry pieces become part of your own flow โ something you make your own, wear with ease, and return to often, wherever life happens to take you.
Porcelain Jewelry Collection
Each piece is fired twice โ first at 960ยฐC and then at 1240ยฐC โ a process that vitrifies the porcelain, making it both delicate and remarkably strong.
Some pieces undergo a third firing when I apply 24k colloidal gold or platinum, permanently fused with the porcelain during the final firing.
Some resemble flowers. Others remind me of waves or water. Some hold feelings captured in porcelain.
I believe all these shapes are the result of letting myself remain in awe and of paying attention.
The more I create, the more I realise that nothing I truly notice is ever wasted.
We spend years loving flowers, photography, nature, textures, light, beautiful objectsโฆ without knowing why.
Then one day, they all flow together.
This collection is what happened when mine did.
When I work on a new piece, I often begin without a rigid plan. Maybe with an idea, but always with enough freedom to let the material surprise me.
Every piece is shaped entirely by hand. I donโt use moulds, which makes each piece truly unique.
I let the porcelain dry a little, then I begin carving, using sponges, brushes, and a few other simple tools. When you work with clay, almost anything can become a tool.
From there, I keep paying attention to what the material can do in that particular moment โ depending on its moisture, the temperature in the room, and the way it responds. I donโt want to force it too quickly into a certain shape. I try to listen first. I let it guide me in the beginning before I take control and refine the details.
Itโs a beautiful philosophy for life, too, right?
Flow is the state I found myself in the first time I touched porcelain.
Itโs also where raiars was born.
Looking back, I think I had been carrying so much uncreated work inside me. Porcelain became the place where it could finally begin to take shape.
Ideas started flowing. What I gather from everyday life keeps transforming into what my hands create. It finds its way back into the world in a new form. For me, this has become the most natural way of giving shape to what I carry within.
It all began with a single porcelain ring and a simple curiosity.
This collection tells the story of how one small experiment became a way of making, observing, and seeing the world.
Porcelain Jewelry Collection
For my love for flowers
I stop for them wherever I go. I grow them, photograph them, bring them home, and almost always have some in a vase.
The more I worked with porcelain, the more I realised that flowers had been quietly shaping the way I see for a long time.
One day it hit me.
The word flower has flow within it.
It felt too true not to become the name of a collection.
These pieces are what happened when that love found its way into porcelain.
And we get to wear them too
Flowers have been shaping the way I see the world for a long time.
This collection is dedicated to them.