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Functional pots, Crafted by hand,
Meant to be lived with.

Nestled in a quiet mud-house at Tasgaon, Satara, Bhama Pottery is rooted in patience, intention, and the beauty of life.
Each piece is hand-thrown on a manual kick-wheel, celebrating raw textures and simplicity to create timeless, functional stoneware.

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Each piece is hand-thrown on a manual kick-wheel, celebrating raw textures and simplicity to create timeless, functional stoneware. Guided by slow, responsible craftsmanship and a deep connection to nature, our work is meant to be lived with, through warm mornings, shared meals, in the quiet presence of a well-made object.

THINGS WE MAKE

The hands behind the pots

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Meet Paresh Deshpande, an engineer turned UI/UX designer, now a potter. He runs Bhama Pottery in the village of Tasgaon, near Satara. His creative path began with college plays and set design, later shifting to game design for social education. After the pandemic, he fell in love with pottery, training under Angad Vohra at Mantra Pottery in Auroville for 2.5 years. He shifted to his ancestral village Tasgaon to open his studio, creating functional stoneware and empowering local women through training and jobs.

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The hands behind the pots

Meet Paresh Deshpande, an engineer turned UI/UX designer, now a potter. He runs Bhama Pottery in the village of Tasgaon, near Satara. His creative path began with college plays and set design, later shifting to game design for social education. After the pandemic, he fell in love with pottery, training under Angad Vohra at Mantra Pottery in Auroville for 2.5 years. He shifted to his ancestral village Tasgaon to open his studio, creating functional stoneware and empowering local women through training and jobs.