Useful Glass by Esque Studio

Elegant Handcrafted Glass:  The Design Led Alternative to Single Use and Plastic

by Elizabeth Shields

It’s hard to go a full day without hearing doom-laden predictions about the future of the planet.  Hearing worst-case scenario predictions about the impact of rising carbon emissions, the depletion of scare resources and ever rates of micro-plastics littering our oceans.  Yet too many of us are still wedded to our consumerist and wasteful lifestyles.   Focusing on the problems and the way in which the planet is suffering doesn’t seem to be a quick motivator to radical change.  Bringing about change can feel like turning a heavily laden container ship:  slow and cumbersome.  Ironically, like one of the very container ships so often packed with single use, and unsustainable cheap products.  

P.E.T. Pitchers

It’s for this reason that Esque Studio, world leaders in innovative handcrafted glass pieces, are changing the focus by creating a different story around environmental concerns:  one which focuses of the beauty, design and elegance of glass products as an alternative to single use and plastic items.  Esque Studio’s commitment to the environment combines zero waste living with zero compromise on functionality and elegance.  

The statistics around plastic use, particularly single use and disposable plastic items are staggering.  Yes, 5 trillion pieces of plastic are already floating in our oceans.  Yes, 73 percent of beach litter is plastic: filters from cigarette butts, bottles, bottle caps, food wrappers, grocery bags, and polystyrene containers. Yes, predictions are that by 2050, virtually every seabird species on the planet will be eating plastic.  Most plastics never make it to recycling facilities - in 2019, of the 8.3 billion metric tons of plastic produced globally,  6.3 billion metric tons became plastic waste. The vast majority of plastics, a depressing 79 percent, accumulates in landfills or as litter.  And yes, there are alternatives to plastic and single use products.  Yet, knowing this doesn’t seem to be sufficient motivation.  

Keg Cups

Existing alternatives to plastic and single use items rarely inspire awe and delight.  Consider how you feel when you think of or touch the standard metal or plastic refillable water cannister that sits on your office desk or in front of you during the board meeting.   Both offer a functional and viable alternative to single use plastic bottles.  They allow you to refill and reuse.  Slowly, they are beginning to replace throwaway single use plastic bottles.  But it’s unlikely you feel joyous and inspired by the product.  It would be surprising if you found yourself moved by the canister’s beauty and elegance.  It’s hard to feel that the item adds value and enrichment to your experience of life or inspires you to creativity.  Yet, as Esque Studio are demonstrating, functionality and beautiful design can go hand in hand, offering a something far more than the parsimonious and frugal approach so often taken by eco- alternatives.  

Kishu Pitcher and Cup with Charcoal Water Filter

P.E.T. Pitchers

For something altogether different, the quirky PET Pitcher provides functionality as 1-liter food and water storage whilst also offering a tongue-in-cheek nod to the insanity of society’s reliance on throw-away culture. Tactile and beautiful to handle and touch, the PET Pitchers come in clear, daffodil, steel blue, and fuchsia color options.  Each piece is a one-off, revealing the skill and craftmanship that blown glass requires and will be a real talking point at any dinner party table.  Talk which focuses on the choices we can make for a sustainable future.   Suddenly the narrative around our planet’s future is less about the negatives, and more about potential.  

It's this design led approach to creative alternatives that has driven master craftsmen, Justin Parker and Andi Kovel, to create Esque Studio’s beautiful and functional glass pieces.  Skilled in the traditional art of glass production, the Oregon-based duo are creating glassware that explores possibilities, both in the logistics of production as they shape and trial new and experimental pieces, and also in the vision they have for sustainability and challenging our love of all things plastic.  They aren’t alone.  The meteoric rise of Etsy, the online marketplace allowing artists and crafters to showcase their handcrafted original pieces, clearly indicates the demand for design led work.  Etsy was the sixth-fastest growing online marketplace worldwide from 2019 and 2021.  With 4.702 million sellers on Etsy at the end of March 2021 (up 67.1% from the previous year), its clear that there’s growing demand and supply of beautiful, handcrafted pieces as viable alternatives for mass-produced.  

Diamond Thickie

Glass blowing is a Heritage craft, thought to have originated from in the Sidon and Babylon regions in the 1st Century BC.  The Ancient Romans adopted the technique, creating unique and functional glassware by blowing air into molten glass with a blowpipe to form a bubble that could then be shaped and molded.  These techniques existed long before the advent of plastic, and amazingly, ancient glass antiques have survived in almost pristine condition, demonstrating the true longevity of quality glass.  Perhaps the most famous example of Ancient Glassware is the Portland Vase, a Roman cameo glass vase that is about 2,000 years old.  Produced using the same glass blowing technique that form the basis of Esque Studio’s pieces, the vase also features the dip-overlay method and intricate gem cutting skills.   Currently, the Vase is housed at the British Museum, an exhibit that tells the story of design and quality craftmanship, inspiring very different feelings and reactions than that elicited by the standard metal or plastic refillable water cannister.  

Aerie Bowls

Esque Studio create beautiful glass pieces to last the test of time.   Elegant Venetian inspired Glass Party Cups, fridge compatible Purify Pitchers that perfectly fits a standard Britta water filter with style and grace and handblown and hand polished faded glass stacking Aerie Bowls.  Each of these glass pieces straddle the line of Heritage craftmanship and design, and sustainable functionality.  So, for a design led alternative to single use and plastic, consider investing in elegant, handcrafted glass.  

Purify Pitcher

Elizabeth Shields is an experienced author of online articles for various blog posts. She is passionate about parenting, home improvement, wellness, and sustainability topics. She is a married mother of two living in Indianapolis and apart from writing, enjoys spending her time with her family and friends.

https://www.happycleans.com/

Embrace Color in Your Space! Glass Art Ideas to Elevate Your Home with Redfin! by Esque Studio


As you design your home’s interior, you’re likely looking for art pieces that speak to you and will make your home one of a kind. Maybe you’ve considered pottery or a custom painting, but there’s nothing quite like glass art. Whether that’s a collection of glass bowls displayed as a centerpiece or an etched glass window, there are countless glass art ideas to incorporate into your home.

If you’re looking for expert advice on bringing these colorful and unique art pieces into your home, look no further. We’ve reached out to glass artists from Palm Beach, FL to Toronto, CA for their expertise on how you can elevate your home’s style with glass art. 

Photo courtesy of Vetro Glassblowing Studio & Fine Art Gallery

Incorporate organic elements of glass art. What is more innovative and breathtaking than the emanating natural qualities of stalactites, you ask? Organic elements of molten glass, carefully manipulated dynamic textures that combine spectrums of iridized opalescence hues. David Gappa’s glass chandeliers instantly convey creativity to the forefront of any home. – Vetro Glassblowing Studio & Fine Art Gallery

The right lighting will make your glass artwork stand out. Choreograph the light for glass artwork. During the day, glass sings in natural light. In the evening, it provides a playground for artificial light to dance. – Steven Ciezki, Ciezki Design LLC

Glass art lasts a lifetime. Adding a piece of decorative art glass to your home is an instant way to provide a burst of color, an inspirational conversation piece, and something that will bring joy to you and your family for a lifetime. My glassworks are small and great for adding color and conversation to a mantle, empty corner/coffee table, curio, window sill or bookshelf. If properly cared for, glass will be around for generations of enjoyment: Glass is the gift of 1,000 years. – Chris Sherwin, owner of Sherwin Art Glass

Photo courtesy of David Patchen Handblown Glass

You can easily incorporate art glass into a home to create a pop of color and/or aesthetic visual interest. Simple forms do best against a clean background. Intricate and larger art pieces can become a focal point and provide off-the-wall artistic interest. Lighting is key for glass; look for places in your home where good backlighting exists (near a window, in front of a well-lit wall) so the glass will glow from behind. – David Patchen, David Patchen Handblown Glass

Glass is the ultimate material for transferring light through color. Use warm-colored glass for kitchen and dining areas, especially since the ubiquitous LED light bulbs tend to cast a blue-hued light. People and food look much better with an inviting glow — nobody appreciates looking like a zombie at the table. If we incorporate blue or green glass around a kitchen/dining space, we add warm tones to balance the light and metallic details for pop and sparkle. – Julie Conway, owner of ILLUMINATA ART GLASS DESIGN LLC

Photo courtesy of Esque Studio

Embrace glass art as a centerpiece. Functional hand-blown objects look amazing when grouped together to create tabletop centerpieces. Your favorite serving pieces can do double duty as decor items by picking one common attribute between the items, such as complimenting colors, similar functions, similar styles by era, or similar techniques. I switch my dining table centerpieces frequently to freshen up my space, and to enjoy collections day to day rather than only on special occasions. My current favorite show pieces are a set of 3 nesting Aerie Bowls from my Esque Studio collection. I placed a small potted plant in the top bowl which changed the bowls function from serving bowls to unique creative planters. – Andi Kovel of Esque Studio

Let the colors shine with the right light. The secret to incorporating glass art into your home is lighting. For glass to appear truly stunning light needs to pass through it. Whether using natural light from windows or spot lights, the right lighting will throw a kaleidoscope of color throughout your space. – Edd Johannemann, Glass Chisel

Make sure you have the correct lighting to highlight glass art. Glass sculpture lights up your home unlike any other fine art medium. Installing the correct lighting though, is very important to ensure it will do just that. There are many different processes used to make glass art, and each one needs a different type of lighting setup to show the piece well. – Jay Scott, President of Habatat Galleries

Photo courtesy of Elsie Kaye Glassworks Art Studio & Boutique

Glass art extends to your dining room. Make your table pop when entertaining guests with these salad serving spoons adorned with brightly colored handcrafted glass beads. These unique pieces bring bold colors and the luscious texture of glass that will get your guests talking. Use these statement pieces to complement your dinnerware and brighten up your entire kitchen. – Holly Kenny, owner of Elsie Kaye Glassworks Art Studio & Boutique

Glass art changes your space throughout the day. The natural opulence and sheen of glass can bring in a modern and crisp feel to any environment. Glass art is dynamic and changes throughout the day as the natural light in the space changes. It is also a great way to introduce pops of color into a space. – Karo Martirosyan, Karo Studios

Embrace glass art in your outdoor space. One of my favorite ways to incorporate glass art in the home is displaying a unique sculptural piece in the garden. Pick something in colors you love and place it in a shade garden for an instant focal point. Or use a grouping of organic shapes along a pathway for instant curb appeal. Whether you choose a modern or whimsical style, a glass art garden piece should put a smile on your face each time you see it. – Glass Art by Margot

Photo courtesy of Crown Dome

Glass is one of the most impressive finishes of the house if used to decorate the space. As an artist, I specialize in the design, development, and fabrication of decorative overhead glass systems such as domes and lay lights: beautiful ceilings that bring soft natural light into space and serve as a stunning focal point. Many homeowners are afraid to add colour to decorative glass projects as they don’t want to create a church-style feeling of their private secular space. In this case, using different combinations of clear textured glasses will create complex effects in glass and deliver soft light. 

Highly textured glass with rough texture used in combination with almost transparent glass with a gentle texture work similar to coloured glass: different textures of glass pick background elements and transmit light in different ways creating an illusion of coloured glass. Using beveled glass and crystal jewels as visual accents – the elements that have the ability to refract light, add an extra layer of effects to the glass ceiling. A crystal or glass chandelier installed under the glass ceiling creates a deeper and continuous space filled with the light of different qualities. – Victoria Balva, Glass Artist at Crown Dome

Alison Bentley

Alison is part of the content marketing team and enjoys writing about real estate trends and home interior design ideas. Her dream home is a cottage-style house with a chef's kitchen and a cozy room to store and play vinyl records.

Email Alison

Tour homes without leaving yours

Learn More

Aerie Bowl set in Lavender by Andi Kovel, shot by Boone Speed.  Wallpaper by Boone Speed for Flavorpapper!

Aerie Bowl set in Lavender by Andi Kovel, shot by Boone Speed. Wallpaper by Boone Speed for Flavorpapper!

Blown Away's Andi Kovel of Esque Studio: On Design and Inspiration for Amuse. by Esque Studio

Blown Away's Andi Kovel of Esque Studio: On Design and Inspiration

Posted by Chelsea Daniels on May 05, 2021

image.png
image.png

Win a signed set of Fairy Vases by Andi Kovel. Sign up for our mailing list here.
No purchase necessary. Winner announced at the end of June 2021.
By signing up for our mailing list you are automatically entered for the drawing and can opt-out through the first newsletter received. Already a client? Don't worry. The signup will function as contact information only.

image.png

Getting inside the minds of creators is often a challenge, but Andi Kovel was willing to talk. She’s the co-owner and creative director of the luxury, high-end glass blowing Esque Studio in Portland, Oregon, and after being recently featured in the second season Netflix’s Blown Away (more on that later), having the spotlight shone in her direction now doesn’t seem so daunting. As a matter of fact, Kovel is keen on engaging in conversation as it relates to the world of glass blowing—especially how it’s integrating with, and reacting to, the design industry. 

Steeped in tradition and technique, there’s a lot more to this artistic endeavor than one might imagine. For Kovel, the intention of adding to and advancing art and design—rather than replicating the past—remains a top priority. Her personal view is reflected in her branding, designing, and self-described “punk lux” style that’s a combination of provocative and avant-garde with functional installation. “The individual vision or voice,” she says, “that is everything.” 

Originally hailing from Brooklyn, Kovel trained in fine art and sculpture and only got into glass blowing after taking a class during the 1990s while she was teaching at the Museum of Modern Art and working towards her master’s degree at New York University. After that, she began her journey as a professional glass artisan, and among her accomplishments, includes Esque Studio being named to Time magazine’s Design 100 and a host of notable clients such as Lenny Kravitz, Nike, Sephora, and The W Hotel (among others). 

image.png

While her range of handmade art and design objects runs the gamut from lamps and sconces to bowls, jugs, and decanters—and are often based on collaborations with her design partner, Justin Parker—Kovel admits she is a big fan of multiples. “I love when you have a grouping because that gives you an opportunity to develop a color palette but still have this modern simplicity to each piece,” she says, “and you can develop an overall form and concept if you put multiples in.” And creating multiples was something Kovel took to her experience on Blown Away with (as you’ll soon read) varying results.

Behind Blown Away

There are 10 episodes in total of the glass-blowing reality competition Blown Away, and Kovel passed all of the challenges up until episode 7. When she was eliminated, I (for one) just wasn’t on board with it. I loved her final piece, “Megaphone,” for what it symbolized, its artistry, and color composition. Having watched the entire season—and knowing that she already has 20-plus years of experience under her belt—I wondered what it was like for Kovel to come into a television series, and its corresponding format, with an already established, highly successful career. “I guess for me going on the show, the one thing I thought about before we started filming was no matter what—I am doing me. I’m going to make sure that I love every piece I make, and that each one is something I would include in my body of work,” she explains. “I’m not going to end up changing or being influenced by what everyone else is doing, or what I think they’re looking for, because I just want all the work to look like mine and be something I love.”


Kovel reveals that signing up to do Blown Away was going to be way out of her normal comfort zone. “I like making stuff, but I also love designing, and I do all of the marketing and branding, so I'm interested in a lot of different aspects. I'm not the head gaffer (professional glassblower) in the studio every day, some days I just assist,” she says. “Lately since the show, it's kind of been more 50/50. Justin and I design our own pieces and make our own work, but sometimes, he’ll make things I designed and vice versa.” 


Ultimately for the designer, the experience was a combination of highs and lows including the challenges of personal and public perceptions as well as personal and professional exposure (on the one hand), and the advantages of her big-picture plan of leveraging the experience (on the other). The use of that leverage has helped expand her brand awareness, level of intimacy, career growth and prospects. “I want more opportunities to create,” explains Kovel. “I want to be driving my career rather than being dragged behind it.” Her love of design, intention, and environmental responsibility played a part as well (so to speak) in the designer’s decision to appear on the show. Having conversations and asking questions about the nature of the industry continues to draw her artistic desire to the fire, and this was one way to bring those discussions to light. 


While art and design on TV is for entertainment, there’s a big focus on social media personalities now too. Although artists are compelled to cater to current media platforms, styles, and attention spans, Kovel continues to stay true to herself, which may have been one of the reasons she didn’t make the final cut. “I think in retrospect it's actually perfect I didn’t fit in there and I wasn’t accepted,” she admits. “I think I had a bigger question mark presented to me, like how design and forward-thinking—or new modalities—are embraced by traditional crafts. It's so great that I wasn't the status quo. I feel like I operate on a different playing field, and the fact that I didn't fit the mold of what they were looking for is perfect.” What’s also perfect is the fact that in the end, Kovel’s appearance did expand her reach with viewers who became fans of her work. “I'm glad I didn't get a 100,000 followers who are pedestrian. The people that liked the work I did there, and have gotten in touch, have all been those who get what I'm doing, that like design, and have an aesthetic. It really brought out my audience.”


Admittedly when it comes to glass blowing, most people can’t name any artists or designers outside of American glass sculptor Dale Chihuly, but now at least if you’re reading this, you’ve become familiar with Andi Kovel who knows that “in the big scheme of things, the show is really interesting because people are interested in watching it and following along, so I think it’s a resurgence of glass as an art form.”


Other Esque Studio pieces, including a killer Mirrored Skull and .38 Special Sculpture, are available at Amusespot here

Stef Schwalb, the author,  is a freelance writer who specializes in food, beverage, design, workplace trends, and travel. Her work has been featured in Boston magazine, Boston Home, Designing Lighting, The SOMM Journal and Tasting Panel magazine.

Shop Zung— Esque Studio by Esque Studio


Shop Zung

Shop Projects About

INTRODUCING

ESQUE STUDIO

JCP7748_800x-1.jpg

Celebrated as influencers and pioneers in the movement of glass as high design, Esque Studio’s glass creations are hand blown by Justin Parker and Andi Kovel in their studio in Portland, Oregon; each with a unique vision of modern innovative design.

Functionality elevated with the aspiration of advancing innovation glass design; inspiration is rooted in their curiosity and awe of the material properties of glass. Provocative, experimental, explorative and intimate; each glass piece is intended for personal interaction.

Content-1.png

Designers and master craftsmen, Andi Kovel and Justin Parker create and define Esque Studio as a collaboration rooted in the innovative exploration of glass. The two met in Brooklyn at Urban Glass where they worked as artists for hire to elite fine artists and designers. Their shared vision and aspiration gave birth to Esque, with the concept of creating modern, functional, concept-based glassware aimed at the design industry and away from the pedestal. For the past 20+ years the duo have led a movement in glass by shattering the rules and redefining notions of craft and material associated with their medium.


NEW IN SHOP

italian-wine-carafe_glasses_esquestudiocopy_1000x.jpg

Italian Carafe Set | Ethereal Vessels

Handblown wine carafe + 2 stemless wine glasses

kishu-karafe_cupset_esquestudio_1200x.jpg

Kishu Karafe | Simple Purity

Fresh forms hand crafted in clear glass with black powdered finish takes it’s design cues from Japanese kishu charcoal water filtering sticks.

sot-pitcher-set-cupoff_esquestudio_1000x.jpg

Söt Carafe | Bedside Accessory

Essential accessory that is not only visually stunning but a practical piece to keep bedside. Stay hydrated and avoid getting dust in your water.

SHOP ESQUE STUDIO

*Please note that since each piece is hand made, the dimensions are approximate, and each piece is unique. Expect slight differences from piece to piece, which is what makes the designs one of a kind.


Shop Zung | A design concept store, Shop Zung is the immersion of Studio Zung products, furniture, and finishes complemented by eclectic objet crafted from artisans around the world.

41 Grand Street, New York, United States