“The thing with ceramics,” said
Charlotte Smith, a ceramist in Atlanta, “is that the possibilities are
endless.”
At her studio, Smith has tile samples on
display. There are concave rectangular tiles coated in an emerald green glaze;
thin square tiles with hand-drawn black lines that form patterns; and circular
tiles with matte pastel glazes.
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The feature they all have in common is that
they were handmade by Smith, who uses an extruder before firing and glazing
each one, resulting in tile pieces that are not uniform.
“I think someone can look at this and know
that it was obviously not made by a machine,” Smith said. “There are
imperfections in it.” But such imperfections, she added, have become a draw for
homeowners seeking to redecorate their spaces with something with more character
than manufactured subway tile.
The interest in handmade tile seems to have
come at a time when ceramics are having a moment more broadly. Seth Rogen’s
pottery side hustle and HBO Max’s Great Pottery Throw Down have boosted
ceramics’ profile in pop culture, and social media has made it easier for
artists to get their wares noticed by a consumer base beyond collectors.
There is also the Instagram of it all.
Ceramics are simply pleasing to look at on social media, which has made it
appealing to a younger generation renovating or decorating their first homes.
And there is a broader movement toward authenticity on those platforms, where
less staged photos are gaining ground.
Perfectly imperfect“There’s definitely a movement toward a
more imperfect look,” said Julie Muñiz, a trend forecasting consultant with a
background in material culture.
When interior designer Annie Downing wants
to “make a home feel a little bit more lived in”, she turns to zellige tile, a
type of glazed terracotta made in Morocco, where artisans use molds to shape
the clay and then fire the tiles in kilns traditionally fueled by crushed olive
pits. With their color variations and chips, no two pieces are alike. Downing,
who lives in Austin, Texas, recalled once finding a nail baked into a tile;
another time, she noticed a rogue blue fleck in white tile. But she said that
was just part of their charm. Her clients will put those pieces “front and
center” in kitchen backsplashes, showers, and fireplaces, she said.
“There are imperfections in it.” But such imperfections, she added, have become a draw for homeowners seeking to redecorate their spaces with something with more character than manufactured subway tile.
Melissa Holt, an interior designer in San
Jose, California, likes zellige so much that she used it in three different
spaces within her own home. She appreciates its versatility. “You can put it in
a shower, you can put it in a steam room, you can put in a pool,” she said.
“Not all materials can do that.” Using zellige throughout the home, she
continued, “makes it feel cohesive.”
Zellige has been around for centuries and
appears in tile work throughout the North African region. The term “zellige”
originally referred to a type of mosaic tile work, but now it is most commonly
used by companies to refer to a style of tile. Companies like Zia Tile and Clé
sell these tiles direct-to-consumer.
Modern and lived-inClé, founded in 2013 by Deborah Osburn, was
born out of her now defunct blog, Tile Envy, which showcased artisan tiles that
were not available through distributors.
When Osburn founded Clé, she partnered with
artisans that produce zellige as well as cement and other terracotta tiles.
Introducing distressed tile to the market came with an Instagram-versus-reality
hurdle, though: Everyone who
purchased the tiles wanted a beautiful, distressed
look for their backsplash, but when the tile arrived they were sometimes
surprised by just how distressed the tiles were, and installers were not sure
of exactly how to install it, either. For instance, when the tiles are affixed
to a surface, they sometimes look uneven and the lines do not necessarily match
up — but grout can help fill in the gaps.
Zellige tiles make up the backdrop for a
kitchen wall. (Photo: Zia Tiles website)
Zellige caught on once “visionary
designers” took a chance on it, Osburn said, and it has become Clé’s top
seller. The most popular color sold by Clé is weathered white, but green is
quickly becoming popular, too, Osburn said, a trend she relates to the rise of
maximalism.
They do not come cheap. Handmade tiles come
at a premium over their manufactured counterparts. Clé’szellige square-shaped
tile in weathered white starts at $19.95 per square foot (about 0.09 square
meters), for example, while a tile meant to look like
handmade zellige, but is
not, at the Tile Shop is about $12.50 per square foot.
Handmade tile can simultaneously make
something feel modern and lived-in, a quality desired by
Amy Heavilin who,
along with her husband, owns a fixer-upper Queen Anne Victorian in Franklin,
Indiana. Heavilin, 45, is a high school band teacher by day and a DIY-er
outside of school. When the couple reinstalled a fireplace downstairs last
year, Heavilin wanted its tile to echo the fish-scale woodwork on the exterior
of the home’s tower. She ultimately purchased peacock tiles from Clay Squared
in Minneapolis, in red, blue, and purple.
“I think that probably some of the interest nowadays with terracotta clays or other sort of handmade pieces is that people still want to have that sense of the human touch on their objects.”
She likes that the tile is noticeably
kiln-fired, and even though the fireplace is clad in vibrant colors, it looks
like it has been there forever. “If you’re installing something and it gets a
little chip or a little crack or isn’t exactly straight, to me that actually
enhances the project a little bit more and makes it feel like it’s always been
there,” Heavilin said.
Rustic handmade tiles“I think the ease and permanence of clay is
really appealing,” said Beth Ann Gerstein, the executive director of the
American Museum of Ceramic Art in Pomona, California. “I think that probably
some of the interest nowadays with terracotta clays or other sort of handmade
pieces is that people still want to have that sense of the human touch on their
objects.”
Osburn, who has worked in the tile industry
for almost 35 years, credits Instagram and other
social media platforms for
taking tile to the “next level”, saying she did not think she would be
discussing “the popularity of some of the oldest tiles available in the world
as a new trend in the US” without them.
In Austin, Clay Imports specializes in
terracotta tile with most of their products made in Saltillo, Mexico. The
rustic nature of handmade tiles is what people are craving in their homes, said
Canan Kaba, the head of growth and marketing.
“During the pandemic, everything had to be
sterile and sleek,” she said. “I think we crave this natural thing that
somebody made with their hand, feel connected to the earth, connected to the
people who make it.”
“You might have amazing kitchen gadgets
which answer to your voice, but then you have this juxtaposing handmade
material in the background,” she continued. “That is just a beautiful thing
that goes right together.”
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