Digitally Crafted Artisan Pottery

Common Works Enables Users to Design Vases with Their Voices

London-based company Common Works is making pottery for the digital age. The company is bringing the power of customization back into the hands of the artisan with a new technological platform called Miko, which is enabling consumers to create unique imprints on items like vases and bowls.

Users are invited to record their voice and specific bodily movements, while Miko transfers those vocal and kinetic movements onto a digitized platform. In a web browser, users can create and transfer these imprints onto beautifully handcrafted ceramics. This process allows the consumer and the artist to maintain creative freedom, while ensuring the product is a one of a kind. Common Works takes advantage of emerging technology to create unconventional and unique results.
Trend Themes
1. Digital Pottery Customization - Common Works' Miko provides a new way for users to digitally customize pottery using their voice and movements, ushering in a new era of personalized crafts.
2. Kinetic Imprints for Artisan Products - The use of Miko's technology to transfer users' bodily movements onto ceramics could disrupt the artisan pottery industry and lead to new levels of creativity and personalization.
3. Artistic Voice Recognition - The incorporation of voice recording with pottery design through Miko presents opportunities for innovation in voice recognition technology for use in other art-related industries, such as music and theater.
Industry Implications
1. Artisan Pottery - Common Works' Miko platform could disrupt the artisan pottery industry by enabling new levels of customization and personalization that were previously impossible.
2. Digital Design Software - The creation of Miko's technology may present opportunities for the development of new digital design software that incorporates voice and kinetic movements to create unique, personalized products.
3. Voice Recognition Tech - The use of voice recognition technology in conjunction with pottery design through Miko could lead to further innovation in voice recognition tech that can be applied to other industries, such as healthcare and smart homes.

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