

Floyd, 27, 45 Linda Broer, 46 Niels Grarup, 25 Michael H. van Rooij, 28 Kumaraswamynaidu Chitrala, 29 Kelly Cho, 7, 30, 31 Hélène Choquet, 32 Adolfo Correa, 33 John Danesh, 10, 12, 13, 34, 35, 36 Emanuele Di Angelantonio, 10, 13, 34, 35, 36 Niki Dimou, 37, 38 Jingzhong Ding, 39 Paul Elliott, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44 Tõnu Esko, 15 Michele K. Bartz, 22 Yoav Ben-Shlomo, 23 Andrew Beswick, 24 Jette Bork-Jensen, 25 Erwin P. Lareau, 14, 15 Mélissa Beaudoin, 4 Karen A. Bao, 14, 15 Xue Zhong, 16 Regina Manansala, 17 Véronique Laplante, 18 Minhui Chen, 19 Ken Sin Lo, 4 Huijun Qian, 20 Caleb A.

Huffman, 7 Arden Moscati, 8 Bhavi Trivedi, 9 Tao Jiang, 10 Parsa Akbari, 10, 11, 12, 13 Dragana Vuckovic, 12 Erik L. Raffield, 3, * Abdou Mousas, 4, * Saori Sakaue, 5, 6 Jennifer E. We love Mandy’s first range of ceramic vessels, with their strong cylindrical shape and graphic silhouette. She plans to add a ceramic lamp and other homewares to the range in the upcoming months.Ming-Huei Chen, 1, 2, * Laura M. ‘I want to continue working with small artisanal manufacturers’ Mandy says. She designs her range from a home studio in Darlinghurst, Sydney, and each pot is then handmade in Indonesia – the pots and lids are wheel thrown, whilst each handle is hand built. An important facet of Mandy’s business is partnering with organisations with a commitment to ethical standards and preserving artisan skills in remote overseas communities. ‘My heart felt happy and full in these places, it’s corny but true!’ she says. Travelling through Japan, Denmark and Norway over the years has informed Mandy’s clean and crisp aesthetic. She thought perhaps others might like them in their homes too. Formerly working as a graphic designer with an interior design background, Mandy launched her new homewares business Esko, just a fortnight ago.ĭesigning products wasn’t part of Mandy’s master plan. ‘I was searching for homewares and not finding quite what I was looking for,’ she recalls, ‘this led me to start designing my own’. Designing functional products soon became an addictive creative outlet, as Mandy saw her ideas manifested in physical form, on display in her home and those of her friends.
