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modern funk Collection

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We’re a Los Angeles design studio, crafting collectible glass objects by hand.

Press

Modern Funk Goes Global

As seen in The New York Times T Magazine. Glassware that’s more than function, it’s culture, it’s collectible.

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From the blog

  1. Read more: LA TIMES
    LA TIMES

    LA TIMES

    His ‘funk is contagious.’ This L.A. glassblower breaks the rules with his stunning vessels

    Mitchell, 37, was an emerging hip-hop artist in Tulsa, Okla., when he first considered glassblowing. It was 2012, and he was recording a song in a Tulsa music studio when he noticed his friend’s impressive glass bong.

    “He told me about a studio in downtown Tulsa where I could take a glass-blowing class as an elective at my community college,” says Mitchell, who was studying business at Tulsa Community College. “I immediately signed up for the class at 1 a.m.”

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  2. Read more: MOSS X Cedric Mitchell Design
    MOSS X Cedric Mitchell Design

    MOSS X Cedric Mitchell Design

    Moss is proud to present artisans that inspire us. Learn about Cedric Mitchell, glass blower redefining the practice.

     

    FOUNDERS

    MOSS CAME TO LIFE AS A PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN OUTLIER SOCIETY VENTURES, LED BY MICHAEL B. JORDAN, AND PURPOSE-DRIVEN, HEALTH AND WELLNESS FOOD AND BEVERAGE PLATFORM, DR SMOOD, FOR CONSCIOUS AND CONSCIENTIOUS LIVING.

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  3. Read more: Gear Patrol Mettle Work: In the Studio with Glass Artist Cedric Mitchell
    Gear Patrol Mettle Work: In the Studio with Glass Artist Cedric Mitchell

    Gear Patrol Mettle Work: In the Studio with Glass Artist Cedric Mitchell

    Cedric Mitchell didn’t fall in love with making glass the first time he tried it. He was in a studio watching several artists work together for hours to make a six-foot-tall vase, when, at the end of the day, the vase broke. All of their hard work was shattered at their feet.

    It was then, seeing how fragile glass work can be, that he was hooked.

    “It was exciting and scary and tense and dangerous,” Mitchell says of that experience. “That’s what attracted me at first. That initial moment of danger and teamwork, and letting go of attachment and being able to bounce back. Everything about it was exciting. I was in.”

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