Only at ABASK

Casa Adams Sally Lightfoot Crab Hand-Painted Porcelain Serving Platter

€275

Coming soon. Add coming soon items to your wislist and we'll notify you when its in stock

Araceli of Casa Adams found her muse along the shorelines of her husband’s family home in Lake Macquarie. She works from her Sydney-based studio – aptly named Coconut Crab – where she crafts and paints species-specific porcelain by hand. Each piece is designed to spread the word about marine conservation, with watercolour-like glazes mirroring the varied palette of the underwater world. This serving platter spotlights a Sally Lightfoot crab (grapsus grapsus) which is found on rocky shores in the Galapagos Islands and across the western coast of South and Central America.

Product ID: 2201277003

View more from: Casa Adams / Serving dishes & platters

Only at ABASK

Araceli of Casa Adams found her muse along the shorelines of her husband’s family home in Lake Macquarie. She works from her Sydney-based studio – aptly named Coconut Crab – where she crafts and paints species-specific porcelain by hand. Each piece is designed to spread the word about marine conservation, with watercolour-like glazes mirroring the varied palette of the underwater world. This serving platter spotlights a Sally Lightfoot crab (grapsus grapsus) which is found on rocky shores in the Galapagos Islands and across the western coast of South and Central America.

Product ID: 2201277003

View more from: Casa Adams / Serving dishes & platters

Only at ABASK

Casa Adams Sally Lightfoot Crab Hand-Painted Porcelain Serving Platter

€275

Coming soon. Add coming soon items to your wislist and we'll notify you when its in stock

Meet the Maker:

Casa Adams

Casa Adams’ beautiful artwork, sketched by founder Araceli, is inspired by the hand-coloured natural history copperplate engravings of the 18th century. Her whimsical illustrations are monoprinted onto Australian porcelain, which is fired, painted and finished by hand using watercolour-like washes of underglaze – a meticulous technique mastered and executed in-house by Araceli and her husband, Dominic. Her approach is environmentally conscious and considered at every turn, from the biodiverse line-up of sea creatures she spotlights to the regenerative energy used to power her all-electric workspace in Sydney. Her reverence for nature runs so deep that she plants a native tree or shrub for each piece sold.