Ines Sculptural Terracotta Vessel
It’s weird how something as simple as a terracotta vessel can feel like a quiet rebuttal to a world obsessed with flat-pack furniture.
What It Is:
The Ines Terracotta Vessel is a hand-sculpted, ethically crafted object from Sabana Grande, Honduras, made of terracotta and iron. Measuring 14.5" wide by 6.25" high, it’s the kind of thing that functions as both décor and philosophical punctuation: it sits on a shelf and somehow communicates, “I care about artistry and process, but I’m not desperate for your approval.” Each piece is unique, with subtle variations in shape and texture that make mass-produced design feel, frankly, a little sad.
Why You’ll Actually Use It:
Because you don’t just need a vessel—you need a conversation starter, a minimalist statement, a hint that your taste exists somewhere between deliberate restraint and ironic detachment. Perfect for a table, a mantle, or next to that plant that everyone else seems to have, it makes ordinary objects feel like curated objects without ever trying too hard.
Key Details:
Materials: Terracotta + Iron
Dimensions: 14.5" W x 6.25" H
Handmade by skilled artisans in Sabana Grande, Honduras
Made-to-order, one-of-a-kind variations
Impact:
Every Ines Vessel supports Meso Goods’ mission to empower artisans with fair wages and sustainable practices, turning what could be just another decorative object into a small act of ethical consumerism.
It’s sculptural. It’s functional. It’s quietly subversive. It’s what happens when craft meets conscience without a single Instagram caption required.
About the brand: Meso Goods
About Meso Goods Meso Goods is like the art-house cinema of home décor—rooted in Latin American craft yet delivered with the punch and polish of modern design. Founded by Diego Olivero in Guatemala and operating from Brooklyn (with studios in India and Guatemala), Meso meticulously curates objects made by artisans who are keeping centuries-old techniques alive. It’s not nostalgia masquerading as luxe—it’s ethical, sustainable design that dares to balance culture, utility, and quiet rebellion all on one shelf.
