• On GameSpot: Wii Fit tells 10-year-old she's fat
November 20, 2008 8:25 AM PST

A mug with your mug

Posted by Thursday Bram

The Portrait Mug

(Credit: House of Harriet)

Ever get your coffee mug mixed up with the guy in the next cubicle? Maybe it would be easier to tell your mugs apart if they were customized. The House of Harriet line of personalized mugs is unique: Harriet Damave draws portraits on the mugs she sells. You can even arrange for a face other than your own to be emblazoned on your cup: Damave works from photographs or descriptions of characteristics. She can even do pets.

Damave's usable artwork is food safe: she glazes and fires the cups herself and makes sure that all glazes melt completely. These cups are dishwasher safe, scratch resistant, and can even be used in the microwave. Customers have the choice of an earthenware or porcelain cup, as well as the option of a gift box.

For a custom House of Harriet mug, the price is $55 plus shipping. Because Damave is based in the Netherlands, shipping to Europe is less expensive than to the U.S. Damave also sells a number of designs that, while they aren't so unique, are a little less expensive. It takes between four and five weeks from initial order to delivery, and Damave provides a sketch for clients' approval before she finalizes her designs.

Thursday Bram is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
Recent posts from Appliances and Kitchen Gadgets
Keep fingers out of condiments
Store your wine where you have space
Cuisinart powers up stand mixers
The Ginsu electric knife--not just for kitchens anymore
Zest without stress
Beer straight from the kitchen counter
A conservative washer for the countertop
Serve sushi at home

About Appliances and Kitchen Gadgets

Having transformed the den and the living room, technology is about to revolutionize the kitchen and even the laundry room. Manufacturers are increasingly cramming silicon into everything from refrigerators to spoons, and you can count on CNET's technology experience to follow and explain these trends. In this blog, you'll find the good, the bad, the priceless, the useless, and everything that fits in between, brought to you by a team of culinary professionals and technology experts from CNET and its network of bloggers.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Appliances and Kitchen Gadgets topics