The workshops are being carefully prepared, studio, materials, process. No half measures. Leave your name and email and I’ll reach out personally the moment the first dates are ready.
A morning, an afternoon, or two full days in the studio. Small groups, real materials, and a piece you take home repaired by you, golden where it broke.
Kintsugi repair is unhurried work. Before anything begins, I need to understand your piece, what it is, how it broke, and what it means to you.
Share a few photos and details below. I’ll review your submission personally and come back to you within 3 business days with an honest assessment, a recommended finish, and a quote. Nothing moves forward until you’re ready.
The word kintsugi (金継ぎ) translates literally as golden joinery. But its deeper meaning cannot be contained in two words. It is a worldview. It is the refusal to hide damage, and the insistence that healing deserves to be seen.
Rock bottom is not an ending, it is a surface. Something to build upon. Every person who has ever fallen apart knows the particular silence of that moment: the pieces around you, the question of whether you could ever be whole again.
Kintsugi begins exactly here. Not before the break, not after the forgetting, but in the honest, uncomfortable aftermath. The bowl does not pretend it was never dropped. The gold goes into the wound.
Most cultures teach us to hide our damage. To glue things back invisibly, to smooth over the evidence, to perform wholeness we don’t yet feel. Kintsugi asks the radical opposite: what if the break is the story worth telling?
To mend something is to declare it worth keeping. The artisan who applies urushi lacquer and gold to a broken bowl is saying: this matters enough to care for. We can say the same to ourselves. Healing is not weakness, it is the highest form of attention.
A kintsugi bowl commands more reverence than an unbroken one. The gold-seamed vessel is rarer, more storied, more alive. This is not sentimentality, it is a reordering of what we consider precious. History, endurance, and healing are worth more than an unmarked surface.
Other repair traditions aim for invisibility, the perfect glue-job, the seamless patch. Kintsugi does the opposite. It traces every fracture in gold, making the damage impossible to miss and impossible to dismiss. Your struggle is not shameful. It is part of your form.
The break is not a failure of the bowl, it is an event in its life. When we hit our lowest point, we are not becoming less. We are being given the raw material for something stronger. Gold cannot fill a crack that doesn’t exist.
Traditional kintsugi takes weeks. Each lacquer layer must cure in carefully controlled humidity before the next can be applied. There is no shortcut. Recovery, too, has its own pace and forcing it produces cracks of a different kind.
Kintsugi does not pretend the break never happened. It incorporates it. Healthy grief works the same way: not forgetting, not denying, but weaving loss into the fabric of who we are, gilded rather than buried.
We revere old things precisely because of what they have survived. The 16th-century teapot with a repaired spout is not diminished, it is storied. A life fully lived carries its history the same way: not as defect, but as depth.
No bowl repairs itself. Kintsugi requires another set of hands, another person who says: I see the break, and I will not look away. The courage to be mended to allow someone close enough to touch the fracture is where the transformation begins.
Japanese culture has produced many profound aesthetics like wabi-sabi, ikigai, mono no aware. But none maps so precisely onto the human experience of suffering and recovery as kintsugi. Because it does not just observe impermanence: it actively honours the act of surviving it.
A broken piece looking for repair. A curiosity about the craft. A potter with work worth continuing. Whatever brings you here, send me a message and we’ll find the way forward.
Kintsugi repair is unhurried work. Before anything begins, I need to understand your piece, what it is, how it broke, and what it means to you.
Share a few photos and details below. I’ll review your submission personally and come back to you within 3 business days with an honest assessment, a recommended finish, and a quote. Nothing moves forward until you’re ready.
I’m looking for potters whose work I respect to build something longer-term with. Whether that means repairing your kiln accidents, giving new life to pieces that didn’t meet your standard but still carry your craft, receiving pieces your clients have broken, or collaborating on something neither of us has tried yet.
A glaze that ran. A rim that warped slightly. A colour that came out wrong. These are not failures, they are the fingerprints of a process. Kintsugi doesn’t just repair breaks, it reframes imperfection as part of the object’s story.
There’s no fixed model here. Tell me about your practice and what feels interesting to you. I read every submission myself and will follow up within 5 days to explore what might make sense.