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Lucia Amber Glass Set (Set of 4)

Lucia Amber Glass Set (Set of 4)

SKU: DC-2791017
$119.00Price

The Lucia Amber Glass set is for people who understand that drinking isn’t just a function—it’s a minor existential performance, preferably in something that looks like it belongs in a Wes Anderson scene.

 

What It Is:
A set of four mouthblown, 100% recycled amber glasses crafted in Mexico, each standing 9 inches tall and 6 inches in diameter, with a generous 500 mL capacity. They’re simultaneously elegant and slightly absurd, the kind of glassware that makes even tap water feel like a plot point in a very low-stakes indie movie. Perfect for cocktails, juice, or just pretending your life has more coherence than it actually does.

 

Why You’ll Actually Use It:
Because ordinary glasses are for people who don’t care about narrative tension in domestic life. These amber beauties turn every drink into a moment worth thinking about, a visual reminder that the small choices—like which glass you pick—are the ones that accumulate into the story of your existence.

 

Key Details:

  • Set of four mouthblown amber glasses

  • 100% recycled glass

  • Dimensions: 9" H x 6" D (16.91 oz / 500 mL)

  • Handmade in Mexico

  • Durable yet elegant


The Lucia Amber Glass set transforms the mundane act of drinking into a mildly philosophical exercise, proving that even your most routine moments can be curated, intentional, and aesthetically satisfying.

 

About the brand:  Powered by People
Powered by People is basically what happens when “shopping small” gets a global operating system. Instead of mass-produced sameness, they connect you with makers who are spinning out hand-dyed textiles, hand-thrown ceramics, and jewelry that feels like it was pulled from an alternate reality where craftsmanship never went out of style. The through-line isn’t just aesthetics—it’s the insistence that every object has both utility and a backstory, often rooted in sustainable practices, reclaimed materials, and cultural traditions that would otherwise get bulldozed by the modern marketplace. In short: they’re trying to prove that conscious consumption doesn’t have to look like homework.

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