Product Description
Here’s a warm, story-forward description that fits Linda’s voice and your brand:
This handcrafted ceramic egg holder by Linda Brown Pottery brings beauty, function, and a touch of Montana artistry to your kitchen. Formed from rich, mid-fire clay and finished with a luminous plum glaze, each slot cradles an egg with softness and intention — a playful blend of sculpture and everyday utility.
Perfect for countertop egg storage, farmer’s market hauls, or displaying hand-dyed or decorative eggs, this piece is as practical as it is artful. No two are exactly alike, making each one a one-of-a-kind treasure from Linda’s Bozeman studio.
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Holds 6 eggs
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Handcrafted in Montana
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Food-safe glaze
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One-of-a-kind artisan piece
A joyful blend of texture, color, and heart — made to spark smiles every time you step into the kitchen.
Handcrafted with heart.
FROM THE ARTIST
Linda Brown Pottery is rooted in Bozeman, Montana, where Linda has been creating functional stoneware and porcelain pieces since 2019. While she began working with clay that year, it wasn’t until 2024 that she finally felt comfortable calling herself a potter — a title earned through dedication, experimentation, and countless joyful hours at the wheel.
Linda works with mid-fire clays ranging from porcelain to darker, earthy blends. She gravitates toward bright celadon glazes, intriguing glaze combinations, and is currently exploring the world of stained clay. Her intention is simple: to create pieces that feel good in the hands, serve a purpose, and spark interest through color, texture, and playful design. Nature is her greatest muse — especially plants and animals, which appear often in her work.
Linda’s pottery journey unfolded unexpectedly. After her youngest child finished high school, she decided to finally take a pottery class — something she’d always dreamed of. She enrolled at The Emerson, practicing until Covid temporarily shuttered the studio. Eager to continue, she searched for a used wheel and instead stumbled upon a rare treasure: a full studio being sold off piece by piece. Wheel, kiln, tools — even the bowl of sponges. It felt like a sign.
Owning her own kiln meant she could create freely. And she did — enough to fill shelves, gift to loved ones, and eventually, to sell at her first small art show in Three Forks, Montana. That was only a year and a half ago, and Linda hopes the road ahead is filled with more pottery, more color, and more shared smiles.
Her work is joyful, approachable, and made with genuine heart — a true celebration of creativity blooming at just the right time.