Handblown Hammered Coupe Cocktail Glasses in Smoke
Owning a coupe glass is a lot like owning vinyl records—you don’t need it, but the fact that you choose to have it says something strange and specific about who you are.
What It Is:
These Handblown Hammered Coupe Cocktail Glasses (in Smoke) are not your average drinking vessels. They’re 100% recycled glass, handblown, and hammered into a shape that looks like it was stolen from a mid-century French movie you’ve never actually seen but would pretend to reference at a dinner party. The smoke-colored glass isn’t sprayed on—because fake permanence is basically the same as impermanence—it’s baked into the material itself, so it will exist as long as the glass exists. At 8oz, they’re the perfect size for a cocktail that implies restraint but still gets you where you need to go.
Why You’ll Actually Use Them:
Because drinking from these feels different. Not better in the measurable sense (liquid still tastes like liquid), but better in the sense that people will assume you’ve thought about it. And they’ll be right. These glasses are ethically made by a women-owned business in India, which means they’re both sustainably produced and morally defensible—two qualities that rarely intersect in the things we buy to get drunk with. The tiny imperfections in the glass? That’s the point. That’s how you know it wasn’t extruded from a factory line designed to make every object indistinguishable from the next.
Key Details:
Coupe cocktail glasses with hammered detailing, smoke finish
8oz capacity, 4" x 4" x 5.5"
Made from 100% recycled glass
Dishwasher safe (but feels like something you should hand wash while listening to a podcast about ethics in design)
Handblown in India by a women-owned business
Not just a glass—more like a philosophical argument you can toast with.
About the brand: Creative Women
Creative Women isn’t just a brand; it’s a quiet revolution in the world of home décor. Founded in 2004, this socially conscious company partners with over 1,400 female artisans across nine countries—including Ethiopia, Morocco, and India—to create handcrafted textiles and home goods that are as culturally rich as they are aesthetically pleasing. By focusing on fair trade practices and sustainable materials, Creative Women empowers artisans to preserve traditional weaving techniques while earning a fair wage. Each piece tells a story of heritage, craftsmanship, and the subtle power of women shaping their own narratives. In a world where mass production often trumps meaning, Creative Women offers a reminder that style can be both beautiful and ethical.
