
Coucke Linen Blend Tea Towel - Spritz
Coucke French Linen Blend Tea Towel - Spritz is a 50 x 75cm linen blend tea towel with an aperitif mood: orange, glassware, bubbles and that early-evening colour that makes people start moving bowls of olives onto the table. It is a kitchen cloth, not a poster, but the print gives a cupboard or oven rail a small hit of summer.
- Linen blend tea towel
- Approx. 50 x 75cm
- Spritz-inspired design with orange and cocktail details
- Good for drying dishes, covering trays or lining a drinks station
It is especially good around outdoor eating: glasses to polish, ice bucket nearby, napkins not quite matching, someone opening the crisps before dinner is ready.
About The Maker: Coucke
Coucke is a French textile company with roots stretching back to the nineteenth century, best known for kitchen linens inspired by food, markets and everyday French life. Their tea towels and aprons often feature sardines, oysters, vegetables and café details that feel warm rather than decorative for decoration’s sake. The brand has a relaxed charm to it. The products are for cooking in real kitchens and long lunches rather than pristine interiors photography.
Original: $26.63
-65%$26.63
$9.32Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Coucke French Linen Blend Tea Towel - Spritz is a 50 x 75cm linen blend tea towel with an aperitif mood: orange, glassware, bubbles and that early-evening colour that makes people start moving bowls of olives onto the table. It is a kitchen cloth, not a poster, but the print gives a cupboard or oven rail a small hit of summer.
- Linen blend tea towel
- Approx. 50 x 75cm
- Spritz-inspired design with orange and cocktail details
- Good for drying dishes, covering trays or lining a drinks station
It is especially good around outdoor eating: glasses to polish, ice bucket nearby, napkins not quite matching, someone opening the crisps before dinner is ready.
About The Maker: Coucke
Coucke is a French textile company with roots stretching back to the nineteenth century, best known for kitchen linens inspired by food, markets and everyday French life. Their tea towels and aprons often feature sardines, oysters, vegetables and café details that feel warm rather than decorative for decoration’s sake. The brand has a relaxed charm to it. The products are for cooking in real kitchens and long lunches rather than pristine interiors photography.



















