Crooked House collection

Take a look at the details below, browse slowly through the gallery and decide if Crooked House is for you.

Crooked house can be made to your design and to your colours, so get in touch if you want something special.

If you want something special for someone special, why not discuss a bespoke piece directly with the potter?


The house stands at an odd angle, as though it had been shaped by the wind or crafted in the dreams of a playful artisan. Its walls are made of weathered clay, the texture rough yet alive with an organic, undulating flow that seems to shift with the viewer’s perspective. The curves are exaggerated, the edges bending in and out in a way that defies the conventional straight lines of modern architecture.

The surface of the house is finished in a stunning metallic glaze, a swirling medley of colors that glint and shimmer as though the house were cloaked in a layer of liquid light. At certain angles, the glaze is a deep cobalt blue, flashing with streaks of silver and violet. In other moments, the surface seems to breathe with shades of bronze and copper, warm and molten like a sunset sky. Faint traces of green and gold play through the texture, fading in and out as the light changes—sometimes bright, sometimes dim, and always dynamic.

The play of light on the house is hypnotic, making the surface feel almost alive, as if the house were constantly shifting its personality with the day. The roof, too, seems to bend and twist unnaturally, as though it’s part of the earth itself, caught in the act of transformation. The walls appear almost fluid in their color, ever-changing, responding to the shifting sunlight or the slant of the moonlight at night.

In its crookedness and its kaleidoscopic shimmer, the house stands as a monument to the strange and the extraordinary, a place that feels more like a dream than a home.

The windows, though small, are irregularly shaped—round, oval, and triangular—and are set deep into the walls like hidden eyes, their glass gleaming in metallic hues that complement the rest of the house’s surreal beauty. There’s a certain mystique about the structure, as though it were not built, but grown, like a living, breathing sculpture caught in a moment of radiant flux.