These are a set of two horizontal flower vases. Individual flower stems can be placed in the curved cylinders or openings of the curved form in the other.
This is a leaning vase that is held up by a claw foot.
This is a vase/pot for flowers, in which individual stems can be placed into the sprouts coming out of the top. The bottom bowl shape can be filled with water through the opening in the top piece, which allows for water to be added or drained and replaced throughout the flower's lifetime in the vase, unlike other vases where the user has to move the flowers in order to get water into the top of the vase.
The glaze choices are supposed to help contribute to the idea that the vase is also very natural and organic, almost as though it is growing, forming, and cracking on its own, such as the sprouts at the top growing around the flower stems that would be in it.
This is a soap dish, I made a foot at the back of the base so that it would lean forward and let the water drain into the sink through the grooves I carved.
These are a set of cups/bowls. I made them by pouring liquid clay into a plaster mold that I made. My goal with these was really to experiment with the different colored clay mixtures and glazes. For the black one, I splattered colored clay on the mold and then poured black clay into it. The green cup is made from yellow clay and blue glaze. The four red and white cups have various different colored clays with red and white glazes over the top, however, they all looked different after being fired.
This is a set of plant holders that will be suspended (in the opposite direction, as they are resting on the openings in the photo) by the two holes that each of them has on their sides to make a plant mobile. They were made by pouring clay into molds and both types in this set are supposed to have an organic shape to relate to nature. The four beige pieces have an image of roots that have been transferred onto the glaze, as though you can see the roots of the plants that will be placed in them.