Skip to Content
Glass Hart Studio
Glass Hart Studio
Home
Shop
Shop All
Small Art Work
Sculptural Bowls
Wall Art
Blog
Events
My Story
0
0
Shop Now
Glass Hart Studio
Glass Hart Studio
Home
Shop
Shop All
Small Art Work
Sculptural Bowls
Wall Art
Blog
Events
My Story
0
0
Shop Now
Home
Folder: Shop
Back
Shop All
Small Art Work
Sculptural Bowls
Wall Art
Blog
Events
My Story
Shop Now
Shop Fine Art Glass Every Drop Counts
_MG_6805.jpg Image 1 of 6
_MG_6805.jpg
HartVLrgEDCBwl3.jpg Image 2 of 6
HartVLrgEDCBwl3.jpg
_MG_6793.jpg Image 3 of 6
_MG_6793.jpg
_MG_6794.jpg Image 4 of 6
_MG_6794.jpg
Vivien Hart Glass 2021-250.jpg Image 5 of 6
Vivien Hart Glass 2021-250.jpg
Vivien Hart Glass 2021-252.jpg Image 6 of 6
Vivien Hart Glass 2021-252.jpg
_MG_6805.jpg
HartVLrgEDCBwl3.jpg
_MG_6793.jpg
_MG_6794.jpg
Vivien Hart Glass 2021-250.jpg
Vivien Hart Glass 2021-252.jpg

Every Drop Counts

$500.00

This piece was first inspired by raindrops falling on a skylight. It began as a piece with water droplets as the primary focus and it had a smooth rounded edge. Over the years the piece has evolved into a metaphor for the ocean and the beauty of the waters edge.

Each piece is fired five times at temperatures ranging from 1170F-1520F. The bowl is currently offered in five sizes-small, medium, medium-large, large and extra large. The edge can come in blue or clear. It is intended as a dramatic focal piece to celebrate one of earth’s most precious resources, our water.

What I love most about this piece is how different the bowl can look under varying degrees of light. One of my favorite times of day is when light is captured in the bowl in such a way that the water droplets and edge are reflected in the table surface below.

Size: Large (approx. 2 1/2” H x 17 1/2” D)

Care: Hand wash gently in warm water with mild soap or use sprayway glass cleaner. Not intended for dishwasher.

Quantity:
Add To Cart

This piece was first inspired by raindrops falling on a skylight. It began as a piece with water droplets as the primary focus and it had a smooth rounded edge. Over the years the piece has evolved into a metaphor for the ocean and the beauty of the waters edge.

Each piece is fired five times at temperatures ranging from 1170F-1520F. The bowl is currently offered in five sizes-small, medium, medium-large, large and extra large. The edge can come in blue or clear. It is intended as a dramatic focal piece to celebrate one of earth’s most precious resources, our water.

What I love most about this piece is how different the bowl can look under varying degrees of light. One of my favorite times of day is when light is captured in the bowl in such a way that the water droplets and edge are reflected in the table surface below.

Size: Large (approx. 2 1/2” H x 17 1/2” D)

Care: Hand wash gently in warm water with mild soap or use sprayway glass cleaner. Not intended for dishwasher.

This piece was first inspired by raindrops falling on a skylight. It began as a piece with water droplets as the primary focus and it had a smooth rounded edge. Over the years the piece has evolved into a metaphor for the ocean and the beauty of the waters edge.

Each piece is fired five times at temperatures ranging from 1170F-1520F. The bowl is currently offered in five sizes-small, medium, medium-large, large and extra large. The edge can come in blue or clear. It is intended as a dramatic focal piece to celebrate one of earth’s most precious resources, our water.

What I love most about this piece is how different the bowl can look under varying degrees of light. One of my favorite times of day is when light is captured in the bowl in such a way that the water droplets and edge are reflected in the table surface below.

Size: Large (approx. 2 1/2” H x 17 1/2” D)

Care: Hand wash gently in warm water with mild soap or use sprayway glass cleaner. Not intended for dishwasher.

Glass hart Studio

Lafayette, CA

Customer Care

Glass care

Commissions

Contact

Return Policy

Terms of Service

Privacy Policy

About

My Story

Blog

Events

© Copyright Vivien Hart. All rights reserved.
Photographs by Adriana Oyarzun, Keay Edwards & Vivien Hart.