What I’ve been up to…

  • Tall necked ceramic bottle, pink and oatmeal glaze swirls with movement from carvings around the whole form.

    Wheat Field Series

    Shown at Bluewater Shopping Village, the wheat field series was created during the UK’s lockdown in 2020. Rosie took inspiration from walking near local wheat fields, and watching the wheat dance in the wind, an image that could continuously conjure calmness. The shapes of the bottles are similar to her daughters small shoulders, creating a torso, where one would breathe deeply to calm down. The glazes have been carefully chosen to reflect the shadows and highlights in the fields, and her distinct style of inlayed glaze reveals movement throughout the whole form.

  • Pebble Pals

    Keep your eye out for Rosie’s next batch, and get them whilst they’re hot! Contact Rosie for any custom orders (wholesale discounts apply).

  • Bluewater Exhibition 2021

    Rosie joined around 50 other local artists and exhibited with Under The Rainbow at Bluewater Shopping Village. It was here that Rosie’s ‘pebble pals’ were a huge success, having sold out twice, and gaining a wholesale order for a Shoreditch boutique.

  • A flat lay of ceramic plant labels, stamped with a serif font and inlayed with black iron oxide.

    Plant Labels

    Only available once a year in Spring, Rosie uses local flora to imprint into the clay, and hand stamps custom requests of growing veggies, herbs, or plants. For avid plant lovers and growers, the Plant Labels are completely frost proof should you leave them outside, and will last a life-time for each spring that rolls around. Click here to contact Rosie for your Plant Labels.

  • Ceramics Art Market Dover 2020

    During the UK’s lockdown, Rosie took part in the online market created by Ceramic Art Dover.

  • Seed Pods

    First envisioned during University, the seed pods are a symbolic catharsis that Rosie created whilst experienced fertility issues. The seed pods are instinctively coiled out of stoneware, creating the organic form. Then seeds are carved out of the outer shell, creating rhythm and organic movement, and placed back inside the pod form. This relationship between taking and giving is what interests Rosie, as well as creating a multisensory experience through ceramic art.

  • Valentine Clays Award 2016

    Valentine Clays Award 2016

    At her degree show (2016), Rosie was awarded Valentine Clays Studentship Prize for her work in Ceramics. Click here to see more.