Neisha Crosland

Neisha Crosland: Paris Ceramics Editions

Pattern. Proportion. Poetry in Ceramic and Glaze.
Few contemporary designers have left as distinct a mark on British design as Neisha Crosland.
In collaboration with Paris Ceramics (a De Ferranti brand), her patterns are reinterpreted as architectural surfaces in ceramic, terracotta, and glaze.
Each collection is conceived as an architectural surface, not a graphic overlay: pattern as structure, texture as memory, and beauty designed to live with you over time.

The Meeting of Minds

It began with a conversation about materials. When Neisha Crosland met Álvaro de Ferranti, custodian of the Paris Ceramics legacy and founder of the De Ferranti Group, they recognised the same design values from different worlds: a devotion to craft, proportion, and permanence.

From that meeting grew four collections that bridge their disciplines: Haveli, Floris, Botanica, and Modernist, with a fifth collection now in development.

The Collections

Each collection speaks in a distinct register yet shares a common language of rhythm and restraint. Haveli explores ornament with discipline. Floris softens space through curved repeat and quiet movement. Botanica translates natural form into delicate ceramic expression. Modernist brings clarity and geometry, designed to sit confidently in contemporary interiors.
Together, the ranges offer designers a toolkit for pattern-led architecture, not surface decoration.

Paris Ceramics and the Atlantic Story

Since 1981, Paris Ceramics has existed to champion European craft for an international design audience, with a particular legacy of connecting British creativity to the American interiors market. Under Álvaro de Ferranti’s direction, the brand returns to its original spirit: designer collaborations, material integrity, and surfaces made to endure.

Neisha Crosland: Paris Ceramics Editions is part of that revival, carrying British pattern-making across continents through ceramic and glaze.

Neisha Crosland

“I’ve always been fascinated by how a repeat pattern can alter your perception of space - how rhythm can calm, or excite, depending on proportion.” - Neisha Crosland

Crosland’s work is defined by balance: geometry held in harmony with emotion, decoration guided by structure. With Paris Ceramics, that sensibility moves from print to permanence, scaled for walls and floors where material depth, light, and texture give the repeat new life.

By Appointment

PARIS CERAMICS
South Park Studios - Suite 10
88 Peterborough Road, London SW6 3HH
United Kingdom