Tea Scoop
Tea Scoop

Tea Scoop

Regular price $65.00 Save $-65.00
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Only 2 items in stock!

An individually handcrafted stainless steel scoop

A perfectly sized scoop to portion your tea leaves when you next brew a cuppa. We also love using our scoop for desserts, tasting dishes as they are bubbling away on the stove and as a little pinch dish for salt at the dinner table. The gentle curve of the scoop is well suited to so many uses, we’ve no doubt you’ll think of many more!

Material: Stainless steel, sold individually

Dimensions: Measures 95mm in length and 75mm wide

About the Makers: Ferro Forma is the culmination of a long standing partnership between Alison Jackson and Dan Lorrimer. They are a metalsmithing workshop specialising in handcrafted small batch edition objects that capture the hand of the maker and the heritage of our craft.

Alison Jackson is a designer, maker and contemporary Silversmith based in Braidwood, Australia. Completing a Gold and Silversmithing degree at the Australian National University, Alison holds over two decades of artistic and technical metal forming expertise.

With an aesthetic best described as elegant, timeless, and minimal, Alison showcases her work through her fine jewellery, tableware, large scale installation, limited editions and exhibition work.

Alison’s work is held in both public and private collections, including a large acquisition by the Canberra Museum and Gallery. A recipient of numerous notable awards and grants,  Alison’s work has been exhibited widely within Australia and also internationally, including at Inhorgenta (Germany) and Milan Design Week (Italy). 

Dan Lorrimer is a contemporary sculptor, machinist, fabricator and toolmaker. With a degree in Sculpture from the Australian National University, Dan has since diversified his work, significantly developing his skills across a wide range of technical areas, specialising in metal forming.

Dan’s sculpture practice explores notions of movement, energy, solidity and illusion through minimalist sculptural forms, often located between the artificial and natural world. He has exhibited widely across Australia and has work held in private collections across the country. 

Photos: Karina Sharpe