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FOR THE OBJECT THAT HAS REACHED YOU

Care of the Object

Read this once. The object will outlast the reading. What follows is the way the house asks you to keep it — first if it is meant for display, then if it is meant for use.

Choose the register of the object

If the object is held in display

Terracotta and smoke-fired black pottery are not finished surfaces. They are documents — kiln gradients, burnish lines, the pressure of a particular hand on a particular afternoon. Display is the simpler register, but it still asks for attention.

  1. Place out of direct sunlight. Prolonged exposure dulls the burnish on black ware and pales the warmth of terracotta.
  2. Keep away from damp walls and steam. Unsealed clay drinks ambient moisture; over months this surfaces as white salt bloom (efflorescence).
  3. Dust dry, never wet. A soft natural-bristle brush, or a dry cotton or microfibre cloth. Move with the form, not across it.
  4. No chemical cleaners, no polish, no oil. The surface is not glazed. Solvents leave a film; oils darken irregularly.
  5. Lift by the body, not by the rim or handle. Rims are the first edge to chip on hand-pulled forms.
  6. Allow the patina to settle. Black pottery deepens with handling; terracotta warms in tone over years. This is the object continuing to make itself.

Note · for outdoor display

Bring the object indoors before the first rain

Both terracotta and black pottery are unsealed. A single freeze–thaw cycle, or a monsoon soak followed by direct sun, is enough to open hairline cracks. If the piece is meant for a verandah or a courtyard niche, give it cover.

Hands of Craft — Est. India

Human Time, Preserved.