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Make your holidays merry and bright with a visit to Cedar Creek, or shop online anytime! Our holiday hours in the gallery vary slightly from the normal schedule. Happy Holidays from all of us here at Cedar Creek!

  • December 24, Open 10 - 3
  • December 25, Closed
  • December 26 - 30, Open 10 - 6
  • December 31, Open 10 - 3
  • January 1, 2025, Open 10 - 6

Inferno Pumpkin

$69.00

A meticulously crafted work of art that mesmerizes with its radiant and vibrant orange hues. It is finished with a very curled golden stem. Let this piece's unique design and appearance add a cozy autumn vibe to your living space!
Created by Cedar Creek Studio Artist Harrison Harper, each Inferno pumpkin measures about 4" in diameter and 4.5" tall. Just like real pumpkins, no two are the same. Each one is unique, with slight variations in color and size. 

Hand-blown glass varies depending on its lighting and surface placement. Take a look at the photo of the pumpkin pair to see how the pumpkin changes when lit from beneath.
Illuminate your pumpkins with an LED Light Base for a beautiful effect. Harrison's pumpkins look best with the medium light base.
Learn more about the LED Light Base- click here!

Details

  • A vibrant orange and yellow, complemented by a very curled golden stem
  • Measures about 4" in diameter and 4.5" tall - including the stem
  • Hand-blown glass crafted by Cedar Creek Studio Artist Harrison Harper

About Harrison Harper

Harrison Harper began his career as a glass artist in 2002, creating lamps. He transitioned from lampworking, where artists use a torch to melt cold glass, to offhand glass blowing, where artists use a blowpipe and hot glass.
In 2004 Harrison began working with artist Lisa Oakley at Oakley Studio Glass. Two years later, he began working as a full-time glassblower but stepped back to be a stay-at-home dad when his first child was born. Harrison remained a studio artist at Cedar Creek until moving to Washington State in 2018. In 2021, Harrison and his family moved back to North Carolina, and he resumed working as a studio artist at Oakley Studio Glass.