Grossman Bowl

$35.00

Made with wood from my mother’s neighbor’s maple tree, this leaf-shaped bowl celebrates the red maple trees found throughout the mid-Atlantic states, New England, Michigan and Wisconsin. A real leaf was traced to create the exterior shape of this piece. The small interior bowl is the perfect size to hold rings or a necklace on the dresser, paper clips on a desk or any other small items wherever they need to be organized.

Exterior Size: 4-1/2” x 4-1/2”
Bowl Diameter: 2-1/4”
Height: 1”

Gorgeous red maple leaves highlight the fall leaf-peeping season. These trees are also ecologically important, providing food and shelter for a wide variety of animals and birds. At Harvard University’s Arnold Arboretum, scientist Jake Grossman studied how maple trees respond to climate stress in order to predict the trees’ future. Maples are dominant trees in eastern deciduous forests and important sources of wood, syrup, and other products. Knowing how climate stress affects particular maples species will help foresters and land managers to prioritize the planting, care, and harvest of natural forests and urban woodlands.

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Made with wood from my mother’s neighbor’s maple tree, this leaf-shaped bowl celebrates the red maple trees found throughout the mid-Atlantic states, New England, Michigan and Wisconsin. A real leaf was traced to create the exterior shape of this piece. The small interior bowl is the perfect size to hold rings or a necklace on the dresser, paper clips on a desk or any other small items wherever they need to be organized.

Exterior Size: 4-1/2” x 4-1/2”
Bowl Diameter: 2-1/4”
Height: 1”

Gorgeous red maple leaves highlight the fall leaf-peeping season. These trees are also ecologically important, providing food and shelter for a wide variety of animals and birds. At Harvard University’s Arnold Arboretum, scientist Jake Grossman studied how maple trees respond to climate stress in order to predict the trees’ future. Maples are dominant trees in eastern deciduous forests and important sources of wood, syrup, and other products. Knowing how climate stress affects particular maples species will help foresters and land managers to prioritize the planting, care, and harvest of natural forests and urban woodlands.

Made with wood from my mother’s neighbor’s maple tree, this leaf-shaped bowl celebrates the red maple trees found throughout the mid-Atlantic states, New England, Michigan and Wisconsin. A real leaf was traced to create the exterior shape of this piece. The small interior bowl is the perfect size to hold rings or a necklace on the dresser, paper clips on a desk or any other small items wherever they need to be organized.

Exterior Size: 4-1/2” x 4-1/2”
Bowl Diameter: 2-1/4”
Height: 1”

Gorgeous red maple leaves highlight the fall leaf-peeping season. These trees are also ecologically important, providing food and shelter for a wide variety of animals and birds. At Harvard University’s Arnold Arboretum, scientist Jake Grossman studied how maple trees respond to climate stress in order to predict the trees’ future. Maples are dominant trees in eastern deciduous forests and important sources of wood, syrup, and other products. Knowing how climate stress affects particular maples species will help foresters and land managers to prioritize the planting, care, and harvest of natural forests and urban woodlands.