This guide is for hand-thrown pottery makers in La Jolla, California — studio note 53. Practical Doshe.Store advice for makers who want to release small batches that sell out intentionally.
Pricing hand-thrown pottery makes every La Jolla maker uncomfortable at first. Material cost is visible; hours at the bench are easy to undercount. A fair price covers clay and glazes, wear on tools, failed pieces, and the skill you built over years.
What buyers pay for
Bundle shipping into the item or show it separately; either works on Doshe if you are consistent. Surprise fees at checkout lose trust faster than an honest sticker price.
Raising prices without losing fans
Limited runs justify premium pricing. If you release small batches that sell out intentionally, highlight scarcity honestly—'twelve mugs this glaze week' is believable; vague hype is not.
Doshe.Store is where hand-thrown pottery makers in California name their worth and find buyers who agree.