The Museum Bud Vases
- Regular price
- $97.75 $115.00
- Regular price
-
$97.75
$115.00 - Regular price
-
- Sale price
- $115.00
- Unit price
- per
Update 11/19: This order is back in stock for pre-order. This item will be fulfilled within 4-6 weeks.
This pair of bud vases represent what we think of as the start of Jono Pandolfi Designs: They were commissioned for the 2004 re-opening of MoMA's Terrace 5 Café and Café 2, helmed by Danny Meyer. In collaboration with a floral designer, Jono created a set of porcelain vases to showcase seasonal blooms alongside the reinvented menu. Pick up this pair if you'd like to set the table with New York City culinary-design history in your own home.
Measurements: Short Vase: 3.5"" diameter x 3"" height, Tall Vase: 3"" diameter x 4"" height
Shipping lead time: 4-6 weeks.
About the 20th Anniversary Collection
It all started at the Museum of Modern Art. In 2004, as Danny Meyer was preparing to re-open MoMA’s Terrace 5 Café and Café 2, his then-employee, future restaurateur and owner of Make It Nice hospitality group, Will Guidara, commissioned Jono Pandolfi to design a chocolate dishes, chopstick holders, and a set of bud vases for the project. In hindsight, this was it: Jono’s big break.
What has followed in the 20 years since has spanned ceramics studios from Queens to Union City, New Jersey, where the operation has grown from a single kiln to more than a dozen and a one-man operation is now a team of 24 artisans. We’ve served over 750 hospitality clients, more than 15,000 home cooks, and, sometime last year, we’re pretty sure we made our one millionth plate.
Featuring reissues from the archive and new collaborations with chefs, this Special Edition Anniversary collection is a celebration of 20 years of making the world a better plate.
DISHWASHER SAFE
MICROWAVE SAFE
HANDMADE IN THE USA
Our Story
When Jono started the company in 2004, he had a simple mission: to design unique dinnerware options for the hospitality industry. He started small, with one wheel and one kiln, and collaborated with chefs, taking risks and learning from his mistakes. Then and now, his priority is to work directly with our clients, responding quickly and thoughtfully to their needs in ways that larger manufacturers can’t, resulting in dinnerware with a personal feel that sets our clients’ restaurants and dining rooms apart.
Our Process
Each piece that Jono has designed has its own unique production process, which can entail as many as 15 individual steps, and use methods such as slip casting, jiggering, and good old-fashioned wheel throwing. Our studio is equipped with 10 kilns and 6 wheels and we begin each day with the thrill of opening our Blaauw kiln to discover the finished pieces we loaded in the night before.