Adapted from Plate (ca. 1936) by American artist Margaret Stottlemeyer, this design originated in the Index of American Design, a New Deal–era initiative that documented the nation’s decorative arts in watercolor, at a moment when industrial modernity threatened to erase them.
Stottlemeyer’s study, now held by the National Gallery of Art, transforms a simple ceramic plate into a meditation on symmetry and craft, blue petals turning like snowflakes around a perfect center.
• 100% ceramic • 2.99″ (7.6 cm)
• Ornament thickness: 0.1″ (2.5 mm)
• Glossy finish
• Double-sided print with the same design
• Gold-colored string included, or replace with your own favorite ribbon
Adapted from Plate (ca. 1936) by American artist Margaret Stottlemeyer, this design originated in the Index of American Design, a New Deal–era initiative that documented the nation’s decorative arts in watercolor, at a moment when industrial modernity threatened to erase them.
Stottlemeyer’s study, now held by the National Gallery of Art, transforms a simple ceramic plate into a meditation on symmetry and craft, blue petals turning like snowflakes around a perfect center.
• 100% ceramic • 2.99″ (7.6 cm)
• Ornament thickness: 0.1″ (2.5 mm)
• Glossy finish
• Double-sided print with the same design
• Gold-colored string included, or replace with your own favorite ribbon