Your online shop for Spanish and Mediterranean artisanal homewares.

Shop for unique traditional Spanish and Mediterranean homewares ceramics, textiles, and gifts.

Free standard shipping and returns on all orders

Your online shop for Spanish and Mediterranean artisanal homewares.

Shop for unique traditional Spanish and Mediterranean homewares ceramics, textiles, and gifts.

Free standard shipping and returns on all orders

Ceramics from Huelva

The Spoon technique and originates from Cortegana, in Huelva, Andalusia. It was born in the 1930s and consists of a spoon with the tip of the bowl cut, the potter uses one spoon for each color and spins the plate while pouring the color, creating amazing spiro graphic type designs.

In a village with 20 potters by the late XIX century, there is only Enrique left, he learned from the last Cortegana potter. He withstands the modernization of crafts and still works with a small pottery wheel and a minimal oven, his collections are small in number, soon when he retires, they will be a piece of museum of a craft that barely reached 100 years. 

5 Results

Hand-painted terracotta marbled dining plate
plato hecho a mano en huelva, marmoelado en azul y blanco

Huelva marbled blue dinner plate

£35.00

Unit price
per 

terracotta pasta bowl made in Spain
Pasta bowl handmade in Spain

Huelva pinwheel green and white pasta bowl

£39.00

Unit price
per 

Huelva pinwheel serving bowl

Huelva pinwheel serving bowl

£65.00

Unit price
per 

Spanish pasta bowl handmade in Andalucia
plato de Huelva hecho a mano

Huelva pinwheel blue and white pasta bowl

£39.00

Unit price
per 

Spanish pinwheel pasta bowl
Plato hondo cerámica de Huelva

Huelva green pasta bowl

£39.00

Unit price
per 

The Spoon

The Cortegana Spoon technique, a unique pottery method originating from Cortegana, Huelva, Andalusia, dates back to the 1930s. This traditional Andalusian pottery technique involves using a specially modified spoon, with a cut bowl tip, to create intricate spirographic designs. Potters utilize individual spoons for each color, carefully spinning the plate while pouring, resulting in visually stunning spirographic pottery