Free Shipping on Purchases over $200

Ash Baguette Vessel with Oil and Wax Finish
Ash Baguette Vessel with Oil and Wax Finish
Ash Baguette Vessel with Oil and Wax Finish
Ash Baguette Vessel with Oil and Wax Finish
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Ash Baguette Vessel with Oil and Wax Finish
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Ash Baguette Vessel with Oil and Wax Finish
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Ash Baguette Vessel with Oil and Wax Finish
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Ash Baguette Vessel with Oil and Wax Finish

Ash Baguette Vessel with Oil and Wax Finish

Regular price
$675.00
Sale price
$675.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 

Kim Min Wook
Ash Wood
Dimensions: 12L x 7.25W x 5H

Have you seen anything like this? Ash wood was sanded and cut to be hyper-thin and then expertly warped to curve into a surreal shape where the edges flip upwards. The grainwork is stunning – covering the entirety of the piece and highlighted by a simple oil wax. The artist Kim Min Wook doesn’t compete with the wood but instead presents it as it came – a simple vehicle to live in its new form highlighting its life: the years, the seasons and the trauma it’s witnessed over hundreds of years.

The product(s) you receive might vary slightly from the product picture due to the nature of your product(s) being 100% handmade. Any item you purchase is one of a kind. There are no two items that are exactly the same.

Care: Dust when needed. This piece has intentional color variations and cracks. Extremely fragile, please lift from below.

Namu Home Goods Persimmon Tree Organic Bowls and Vases Wabi Sabi

The final product is beautiful, but the process is sweat and work and ultimately, in incredibly amount of effort.

Kim Min Wook has always had a fascination with making things beautiful, and feels that it’s in his DNA. The artist gravitated towards woodworking and has always had an affinity for trees. They are the longest living and tallest living thing on the planet, afterall. While some people like the feel dirt in their hands, and other’s like water, Kim liked the feel of wood. After taking a woodworking class with 20 other students, Kim was only one of only three students to become a woodworker. It was in this class he realized he was different. While most people think about how they can transform wood to make something for themselves, Kim always tried to revive the innate beauty of the tree. Kim says, “Even if my talent is lacking, wood is so beautiful it makes up for where I lack. It fixes me in places, and compensates for my shortcomings. I follow where the wood takes me, I leave my own ambition at the door.” Kim Min Wook’s works are extraordinarily light in comparison to the huge log that he starts with and oftentimes, a block of wood can go from 80 pounds to 1 pound (he works with his father to carry these large pieces of lumber). Stripping away that much wood takes an enormous amount of work. The final product is beautiful, but the process is sweat and work and ultimately, in incredibly amount of effort.

organic vases and bowls
Qi Minu Korean WoodWorking Studio