Ephraim Pottery Gallery
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Ephraim Pottery Gallery
We celebrate the hand of the maker in everything we do, and intentionally lean away from technologies that remove the artists' hands from our work. Each piece of pottery is made to order- hand-thrown and sculpted, and finished with Ephraim Pottery's in house-designed glazes. Since 1996 we've been making collectible art pottery, and more recently, tableware, in our rural Wisconsin studio where ten artists collaborate on all aspects of the artwork.

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Services
Art Pottery
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American ceramics history includes a long tradition of creating collectible art pottery. This pottery type is characterized as being primarily decorative and inspired by nature. Ephraim Pottery has carried on this tradition of making collectible art pottery since 1996. We create vases, lanterns, and lidded vessels.
POT of the Week
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Every Tuesday morning we offer a special, limited design - vase, pot, tile, mug, bowl, jar, ornament, etc. - for one week only. The featured piece is available to order on our website for 7 days, making it an extremely limited offering. These designs all explore something new. Some are twists on a current design, and some are entirely new pieces.
Vases
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Since 1996, Ephraim art pottery vases have been the American decorative arts standard. Our aesthetic celebrates the hand of the maker. Each is wheel-thrown, hand-sculpted, and finished with our signature in-house designed glazes. As a result, the artist is reflected in each individually-crafted vase.
Memorial Urns and Jars
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Ephraim Pottery would be honored to help you select and customize a one-of-a-kind urn to memorialize your loved one. Generation upon generation will cherish our ceramic memorial urns as unique pieces of art. Ceramic memorial urns may be customized with a short hand-incised inscription on their foot.
Classic Arts & Crafts
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Twenty-five years ago, with the rise of the cubicle and mass-produced goods, Kevin Hicks revered a time when people made objects by hand. Hicks, a skilled potter with a business degree, imagined a modern artisan guild where collaboration could thrive. Through this collaboration, handmade products would show the hand of the maker and display a reverence for the natural world.
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