Salt Tide • Tapas Plate

My Store 1 Salt Tide Tapas Plate (19cm)

Salt Tide • Tapas Plate

1
£38.00
Skip to product information
My Store 1 Salt Tide Tapas Plate (19cm)

Salt Tide • Tapas Plate

£38.00
PICK YOUR SET OF PLATES
Description

The table that starts with one plate and ends with six. No plan, no menu... just more wine, more food, keep it coming.

Five mackerel, mid-swim, cobalt blue that splashes and spreads across the surface. All the movement is in the painting. The plate itself just holds it, quietly, cleanly.

Oven, microwave and dishwasher safe · 19 cm diameter · No two are identical.

Details & Care
  • 19 cm diameter · 3.5 cm deep · 0.80 kg
  • Handmade in Spain
  • Dishwasher, oven and microwave safe
  • Built for daily use. No special treatment needed.
Delivery, Returns, and Refunds

DELIVERY
All orders dispatched within 5 working days

United Kingdom
• Costs: 1 plate £6.00 · 2 plates £11.00 · 4 plates £20.00
• Free UK delivery on orders over £150.00

Europe
• Costs: 1 plate £10.00 · 2 plates £18.50 · 4 plates £32.00

USA & Canada
• Costs: 1 plate £22.00 · 2 plates £40.00 · 4 plates £70.00

RETURNS
• You have 30 days from delivery to return anything, for any reason. Email team@cardoonstudio.com with your order number and we'll take it from there.
• If something arrived faulty or not as described, we'll refund your delivery charge too.

REFUNDS
• Processed within 10 days of receiving your return, back to your original payment method.

Home Styling
  • I tend to reach for these when setting a table that isn't too formal, something that works just as well indoors as it does outside. They sit easily with linen, simple glassware, whatever is already there. The blue lifts the table without taking over. Over time you start mixing them in without thinking. They become part of how you set the table.
Cultural Impact

Cobalt blue arrived in this part of the world over a thousand years ago, carried by artisans who brought the technique from Persia, through North Africa, across the Mediterranean. They painted it beneath the glaze, not over it. A decision that turned out to be permanent.

By the 15th century, the workshops around Valencia were the most sophisticated ceramic producers in Europe. The Medicis collected their work. The Pope ordered their tiles. The cobalt travelled further than the people who made it.

What's remarkable is that it never left. Not as museum craft, not as heritage tourism, just as a living practice, still running in the hands of independent makers who chose to stay, to work slowly, to keep making things the way they know how. The Mediterranean light. The sea on a Tuesday morning. A landscape that finds its way into the clay whether they intend it to or not.

The world moved fast. They kept this as a sign of who they are.

Material Intelligence

Red earth mixed with quartz and feldspar, fired until it holds heat, resists water, lasts. High-fired twice, dense enough to go from oven to table without complaint, and look better for it over time.

Each plate is hand-thrown and hand-painted, so the variations you see, where the cobalt pooled, where the brush lifted, are the record of how it was made. Not inconsistency. The maker's hand, still visible.

The motifs are painted beneath the glaze, not over it. They become part of the clay itself. They will not fade.

This is what Glenn Adamson, in Fewer Better Things*, calls 'material intelligence' — a knowledge that lives not just in the hands, but in an understanding of how clay moves, resists, and transforms; how it holds heat, absorbs light, and feels right in the hand.

Personalisation

Email team@cardoonstudio.com for complimentary personalisation—add a special date, meaningful quote, or initials to the back of your piece.

Related items