Cortona Ceramics
Based in Cortona, Tuscany, Ivo Angel creates ceramic tableware in collaboration with artisans from surrounding towns and villages using traditional techniques. Our Cortona collection is handmade exclusively for TOAST, designed by Giulio Lucarini and crafted from terracotta clay by a family-owned workshop in Deruta.
Set of two Cortona pinch pots designed in Tuscany by Cortonese artisan Giulio Lucarini for Ivo Angel, a company celebrating Italian tradition and based in the hillside Tuscan town of Cortona. Wheel-thrown from terracotta clay by a pottery in Deruta that has been passed down four generations, then decorated with slip and finished with a transparent glaze. Each varies slightly in shape and colour.
Details
Hand wash. Terracotta.
Made in Italy.
Each ceramic piece has been thrown or pressed and glazed by hand. Due to the handmade nature, there may be pleasing variations and irregularities in colour, size and shape.
Approx. D 8cm x H 3.5cm.
Delivery & Returns
Free standard delivery on full price orders over £125.
Standard Delivery: £3.00
Express Delivery: £5.00
Next Working Day Delivery: £7.00
Before 12pm Next Working Day Delivery: £13.00
Free returns (subject to our returns policy).
£3 returns charge on sale-only orders.
Please refer to our delivery & returns policies for more information.
Reviews
Cortona Ceramics
A flying visit to a friend in Tuscany over ten years ago became a defining voyage for Canadian artist Jennifer Perez. Inspired by the charm of the people, the countryside and the colours, she moved there soon after. Through her company, Ivo Angel, she now collaborates with potters from Cortona and neighbouring Tuscan and Umbrian villages whose experience with clay stretches back years.
“These artisans did not become artisans; they were born artisans,” Jennifer says. “They live and breathe their work as the tradition runs deep – in many cases, the skill has been passed down through generations.”
Ivo Angel’s terracotta pieces for TOAST are traditionally crafted by Cortonese artisan Giulio Lucarini, who has been working with clay since he was 18 and describes it as his “natural calling.” They are finished with a hand-painted splatter effect, inspired by antique ceramics from the region.