Only at ABASK

Casa Adams Fish Hand-Painted Porcelain Dinner Plates (Set of 2)

¥73,150

We only have 1 left. To enquire about higher quantities, contact us here.

Araceli of Casa Adams found her muse along the shorelines of her husband’s family home in Lake Macquarie. She works from her Sydney-based studio – aptly named Coconut Crab – where she crafts and paints species-specific porcelain by hand. Each piece is designed to spread the word about marine conservation, with watercolour-like glazes mirroring the varied palette of the underwater world. These only-at-ABASK plates spotlight an old wife (enoplosus armatus), which is endemic to the Great Southern Reef, and a southern spotted opah (lampris australensis) from the cold waters of the southern hemisphere.

Product ID: 2203277002

View more from: Casa Adams / Dinner plates

Only at ABASK

Araceli of Casa Adams found her muse along the shorelines of her husband’s family home in Lake Macquarie. She works from her Sydney-based studio – aptly named Coconut Crab – where she crafts and paints species-specific porcelain by hand. Each piece is designed to spread the word about marine conservation, with watercolour-like glazes mirroring the varied palette of the underwater world. These only-at-ABASK plates spotlight an old wife (enoplosus armatus), which is endemic to the Great Southern Reef, and a southern spotted opah (lampris australensis) from the cold waters of the southern hemisphere.

Product ID: 2203277002

View more from: Casa Adams / Dinner plates

Only at ABASK

Casa Adams Fish Hand-Painted Porcelain Dinner Plates (Set of 2)

¥73,150

Qty
1
More from Dinner Plates

Meet the Maker:

Casa Adams

Casa Adams’ beautiful artwork, sketched by founder Araceli, is inspired by the hand-coloured natural history copperplate engravings of the 18th century. Her whimsical illustrations are monoprinted onto Australian porcelain, which is fired, painted and finished by hand using watercolour-like washes of underglaze – a meticulous technique mastered and executed in-house by Araceli and her husband, Dominic. Her approach is environmentally conscious and considered at every turn, from the biodiverse line-up of sea creatures she spotlights to the regenerative energy used to power her all-electric workspace in Sydney. Her reverence for nature runs so deep that she plants a native tree or shrub for each piece sold.