landscapes-9-ESP

landscapes-8-ESP

landscapes-7-ESP

landscapes-6-ESP

landscapes-5-ESP

landscapes-4-ESP

landscapes-3-ESP

landscapes-2-ESP

landscapes-1-ESP

landscapes-9-ANG

landscapes-8-ANG

landscapes-7-ANG

landscapes-6-ANG

landscapes-5-ANG

landscapes-4-ANG

landscapes-3-ANG

landscapes-2-ANG

landscapes-1-ANG

raku-9-ESP

raku-8-ESP

raku-7-ESP

raku-6-ESP

raku-5-ESP

raku-4-ESP

raku-3-ESP

raku-2-ESP

raku-1-ESP

raku-9-ANG

raku-8-ANG

raku-7-ANG

raku-6-ANG

raku-5-ANG

raku-4-ANG

raku-3-ANG

raku-2-ANG

raku-1-ANG

fishes-9-ESP

fishes-8-ESP

fishes-7-ESP

fishes-6-ESP

fishes-5-ESP

fishes-4-ESP

fishes-3-ESP

fishes-2-ESP

fishes-1-ESP

fishes-9-ANG

fishes-8-ANG

fishes-7-ANG

fishes-6-ANG

fishes-5-ANG

fishes-4-ANG

fishes-3-ANG

fishes-2-ANG

The fish collection consists of different unique pieces. The formats are as wide as your imagination. From a wall mural to a sculptural set. From a glass pedestal to an iron pedestal. From small fish to very large fish. If you are interested in having a fish on the wall, on the shelf, on the table, or in the garden, please contact me

Detalle de las piezas de cerámica para el Restaurante Quinze Ous.

Detalle de las piezas de cerámica creadas para el Restaurant Malaespina Barra Japonesa.

Vajilla de cerámica kilómetro cero, hecha con tierras volcánicas de la zona.

Plato de vidrio trabajado con textura y sobre molde irregular.

Boles de arcilla volcànica para el Restaurante Malespina Barra Japonesa

Boles de ceràmica hechos con mezcla de arcillas volcànicas con la técnica del Neriage para el Restaurante Equilibri.

Boles de ceràmica con esmaltes del territorio diseñados y producidos especialmente para el Restaurante Malespina Barra Japonesa

Piezas de vidrio especialmente diseñadas para el Restaurante Malespina Barra Japonesa.

Proyecto integral de vajilla de cerámica para el Restaurante Quinze Ous. Mezcla de arcillas volcánicas locales. Los esmaltes también contienen tierras de la zona. Modeladas a mano y con el logo del establecimiento.

Details of the ceramic pieces for the Quinze Ous Restaurant.

Details of the ceramic pieces created for the Malaespina Japanese Bar Restaurant.

Local ceramic tableware made with volcanic clay from the area.

Glass plate worked with texture and irregular mold.

Volcanic clay bowls for the Malespina Japanese Bar Restaurant

Ceramic bowls made with a mixture of volcanic clays using the Neriage technique for the Equilibri Restaurant

Ceramic bowls with glazes from the region designed and produced especially for Malespina Japanese Bar Restaurant.

Glass pieces specially designed for the Malespina Japanese Bar Restaurant.

Comprehensive ceramic tableware project for the Restaurant Quinze Ous. A blend of local volcanic clays. The glazes also contain local soils. Handcrafted and with the establishment's logo.

Escultura de hierro y vidrio creada a partir del logotipo de la empresa.

Escultura de peces de diferentes medidas creada especialmente para el espacio bajo escalera de la vivienda.

Piezas de vidrio integradas en mueble de madera para dar puntos de luz en el local. Lámparas de cerámica para las mesas.

Porche artesanal diseñado y hecho a tres bandas, con estructuras de hierro y mimbre y aplicaciones de vidrio.

Mesa única hecha a medida con elementos macizos de vidrio creados con la técnica de molde perdido, y un soporte de hierro escultórico artesanal.

Vidrios para mueble de cocina, texturados y trabajados con mica en polvo.

Glass for kitchen furniture, textured and treated with mica powder.

Custom-made unique table with solid glass elements created using the lost-wax casting technique, and a handcrafted sculptural iron base.

Artisanal porch designed and made on three sides, with iron and wicker structures and glass applications.

Glass pieces applied to wooden furniture to add points of light to the space. Ceramic lamps for the tables.

Glass fish sculpture of different sizes created especially for the space under the staircase in the house.

Iron and glass sculpture created based on the origami figure of the company logo.

Escultura de ferro i vidre creada a partir de la figura d’origami del logotip de l’empresa.

Escultura de peixos de vidre de diferents mides creada especialment per a l’espai de sota escala de la vivenda,

Peces de vidre aplicades a moble de fusta per donar punts de llum al local. Làmpades de ceràmica per a les taules.


Taula única feta a mida amb elements massissos de vidre creats amb la tècnica de motlle perdut, i un suport de ferro escultòric artesanal.


Taula única feta a mida amb elements massissos de vidre creats amb la tècnica de motlle perdut, i un suport de ferro escultòric artesanal.


Vidres per a moble de cuina, texturats i treballats amb pols de mica.

Peça escultòrica de vidre de 50 cm x 30 cm amb textura, esmalts i pols de vidre. Venuda.

Peça treballada amb coure i vidre

Menhir de vidre amb textura i pols de vidre de color

Peça treballada amb coure i vidre

Peça escultòrica de vidre de 50 cm x 30 cm amb textura, esmalts i pols de vidre. Venuda.

Peça escultòrica de vidre de 50 cm x 30 cm amb textura, esmalts i pols de vidre. Venuda.

Peça de 30 cm de diàmetre de vidre amb inclusions de ceràmica

Menhir de vidre de 30 cm alçada

Col·lecció de peces decoratives de vidre de 30 cm x 20 cm aprox amb textura i pols de vidre. Disponibles.

Conjunt de tres vasets amb esmalts fets amb nitrat de plata i reserves de cera. Venuts

Peces decoratives de centre de taula que combinen el blanc i el negre. Treball de textures amb pedra volcànica. Esmalts elaborats amb pedra basàltica. Disponibles

Peça de centre de taula amb barreja d’esmalts opacs i transparents i treball de reserves amb cera. Venuda

Peça de centre de taula. Treball amb reserva de cera i barreja d’esmalts opacs i transparents beige i blancs. 38 cm diàmetre. Venuda

Bol amb esmalts turqueses i blancs craquelats. Venut

Bol de centre de taula. Treball de reserva amb ceres, i barreja d’esmalts craquelats. Disponible a Kave Home

Peces de centre de taula. Treball de textura amb pedra volcànica i escorces. Reserves amb cera i esmalts blancs i pasta de vidre volcànica. Mides aproximades 40 cm llargada * 22 cm. Disponible

Peça de centre de taula. Treball amb reserva de cera i barreja d’esmalts opacs i transparents. 38 cm diàmetre. Venuda.

Bol de 22 cm diàmetre. Barreja d’esmalts opacs i transparents amb pols de vidre negre. Venuda

Peix de vidre de color fet amb esmalts i pols de vidre, muntatge sobre peana de vidre polida a mà. Diferents opcions de mida, colors i muntatge.

Peixos de vidre de color muntats sobre peana de vidre. Diferents opcions de mida, color i muntatge.

Peixos de vidre de color fets amb pols de vidre i esmalts. Diferents opcions de color, mida i muntatge.

Peça de vidre termoformada de 80 cm amb pols de vidre de color i muntada sobre peana de vidre polida a mà. Diferents opcions de mides, colors i preus.

Conjunt escultòric de 2 peces de vidre termoformat amb pols de vidre de color i muntatge sobre peana de ferro. Diferents opcions de mides i colors.

Peça de vidre termoformat amb pols de vidre de color i muntatge sobre peana de ferro. Diferents opcions de mida i color.

Conjunt escultòric de peixos de vidre muntats sobre peana de ferro a diferents alçades. Mira aquí el projecte sencer

Peix de vidre termoformat amb pols de vidre de color i muntatge sobre peana de ferro. Diferents opcions de mida i color.

Peça escultòrica vidre termoformat amb pols de vidre de color i muntatge sobre pena de ferro. Diferents opcions de color i mides.

Detall de les peces de ceràmica creades per al Restaurant Quinze Ous.

Detall de les peces de ceràmica creades per al Restaurant Malespina Barra Japonesa.

Vaixelles de ceràmica kilòmetre zero, fetes amb terres volcàniques de la zona.

Plat de vidre treballat amb textura i sobre motlle irregular.

Bols de ceràmica fets amb barreja d'argiles volcàniques amb la tècnica Neriage per al Restaurant Equilibri

Bols de ceràmica amb esmalts del territori dissenyats i produïts especialment pel Restaurant Malespina Barra Japonesa

Peces de vidre especialment dissenyades pel Restaurant Malespina Barra Japonesa.

Projecte integral de vaixella de ceràmica pel restaurant Quinze Ous. Barreja d'argiles volcàniques locals. Els esmalts també contenen terres de la zona. Modelades a mà i amb logo de l'establiment.

There are no KYC-certified casinos or Verification Casinos (UK) A Brief Overview of What it really means, why it’s generally a red Flag on the streets of Great Britain, and How to protect yourself (18+)

There are no KYC-certified casinos or Verification Casinos (UK) A Brief Overview of What it really means, why it’s generally a red Flag on the streets of Great Britain, and How to protect yourself (18+)

Very Important (18+): This is informational content designed for UK readers. We are not in any way recommending casinos. I’m and I’m not giving “top list of casinos,” and not discussing how to bet. The intention is to provide clarity the meaning of “no KYC/no verification” claims usually mean and also what UK rules operate, how withdrawals frequently cause trouble in this particular cluster, and ways to limit the danger of debt or scam.

What KYC refers to (and why it’s there)

KYC (Know Your Customer) is the set of checks used to confirm that you’re real and legally allowed to bet. In online casinos, it generally includes:

  • Age verification (18+)

  • ID verification (name the day of birth and address)

  • Sometimes, checks are related to fraud prevention or compliance with legal requirements

In Great Britain, the UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) is explicit to the people who gamble “All betting sites on the internet have to ask you for proof of your age and identity prior to you start playing. ”

For licensees, the UKGC’s guidelines includes a requirement that remote operators must verify (at at the very least) the address, name, and date of birth before allowing any customer to bet.

That’s the reason “no verification” messaging clashes with what the legal UK sector is built around.

What makes people search “No KYC casinos” and “No casinos with verification” for the UK

Most search activity falls into one of these buckets:

  1. Privacy / commoditiy: “I do not want to upload any documents.”

  2. Fast: “I want instant registration and instant withdrawals.”

  3. Issues with access: “I did not pass verification elsewhere and would like to find someone else to verify me.”

  4. Hitting the controls: “I want to bypass any checks or restrictions.”

The first two are quite common and easily understood. The latter two are where the risk increases dramatically. This is because sites advertising “no verification” tend to draw people in other countries who have blocked them, creating a market for fraudulent operators and high-risk scams.

“No KYC” or “No Verification”: the three variations you’ll likely see

These terms are widely used on the internet. In reality, you’ll find one of these types of models:

1) “No documents… to begin with”

The site’s purpose is to allow quick registration, no need to wait for documents (often after withdrawal).

UKGC claims that operators cannot make age/ID proof the requirement to withdraw money even if they had requested it earlier however, there could occur instances where it is possible that information will only be requested afterward to satisfy legal obligations.

2) “Low KYC / e-verification”

The site runs “electronic checking” first, and then only seeks documentation if there is a reason that isn’t in order or may trigger fire. That’s not “no confirmation.” It’s “verification by reducing uploads.”

3) “No KYC ever”

This implies you can deposit cash, play, or withdraw without the need for a meaningful identity check. In the case of UK (Great Britain) players, this claim should be treated as a big red flag as the UKGC’s published policy requires age verification prior to playing for businesses that operate online.

The UK truth: Why “No confirmation” is usually not compatible with gambling that is licensed in the UK

If a website truly operating under UKGC rules, then the “no verification” assurance doesn’t conform to the standards of the base.

UKGC public guidance:

  • Businesses that offer online gambling must confirm your the identity and age of players before allowing them to play.

UKGC Licensee Framework (LCCP condition on identification verification) states licensees must acquire and verify data to establish authenticity prior to when a customer is permitted gambling, and that information should include (not just) address, name, date of birth.

If a website loudly advertises “No KYC / No Verification” and is also marketing itself on the market as “UK-friendly,” you should immediately inquire:

  • Are they UKGC licensed?

  • Are they using misleading commercial language?

  • Are they aiming for GB customers who do not have UKGC licenses?

UKGC also states they declare it illegal to offer commercial gaming services to the public within Great Britain without a UKGC license, including instances where the operator holds a licence in a different jurisdiction, but operates on the market in GB without UKGC license.

The most common trap that consumers fall into: “No KYC” becomes “KYC at withdrawal”

This is the most common pattern underlying complaints in the cluster:

  • Depositing money is easy

  • You try to withdraw

  • Now you’re seeing “verification mandatory,” “security review,”, or “enhanced checks”

  • Timelines can be elusive

  • Support response becomes generic

  • There are times when you will be asked for numerous documents, selfies, proofs, or “source sources of the funds” details.

Although a business may have legitimate reasons for wanting to obtain data later, UKGC’s guidance states that age/ID tests shouldn’t be delayed until the time of withdrawal, even if they could have taken place earlier.

Why this is crucial for your site: the cluster is not so much concerned with “anonymous gameplay” and more concerned with disagreement friction and withdrawal risk.

Why “No Verification” claims correlate with higher payout risk

Take a look at the model of business incentives:

  • Fast deposit increases conversion.

  • Affluent marketing makes it more appealing to users.

  • If a company isn’t properly monitored or operating under UK regulations, the company could have more freedom to:

    • delay payouts,

    • employ broad discretionary clauses

    • In the future, you can ask for more details repeatedly.

    • or force changing “security security.”

This is why the best way to go is to treat “no confirmation” as a risk signal or a sign of weakness, not as a feature.

It is the UK Risk angle that is legal (kept simple)

If a website isn’t licensed by the UKGC, but serves GB consumers, UKGC classifies that as illegally licensed commercial gambling in Great Britain.

There is no need to become a lawyer in order to utilize this as a security device:

  • UKGC license status affects the standards the operator must follow.

  • It impacts the structure of dispute and complaints. structure that you can count on.

  • It affects the regulator’s ability in imposing effective enforcement pressure.

A practical “risk map” for UK users

Here’s a straightforward matrix that you could include on your page.

Table “No confirmation” claim relative to likely risk (UK)

Claim type
What does it generally mean?
Risk of withdrawing
Scam risk
“No documents required (fast sign-up)” Verification may happen later Medium Medium
“Low KYC/e-checks” Verification is happening, digitally Low-Medium Low-Medium
“No KYC withdrawals guaranteed” Marketing claim, often unrealistic High High
“No age verification” Conflicts with UKGC expectations Very high Very high

(UKGC’s public guidance on verify-before-gambling is the key benchmark for the UK market. )

Common red flags for scams in “No KYC / No Verification” searches

This group is targeted by scammers because it targets people, who already want to avoid friction. These are the patterns you must clearly define.

Immediate stop signals

  • “Pay an additional fee/tax in order to get your withdrawal”

  • “Make one more deposit to confirm/unlock the payout”

  • Support is only available through Telegram/WhatsApp

  • They are requesting passwords, OTP codes, or remote access

  • They encourage you to click “verification URLs” on strange domains

High-risk warnings

  • No legally-valid company name in Terms

  • No clear complaints process

  • Multiple mirror domains / frequent switch of domains

  • Uncomplicated withdrawal timelines (“up of 30 to 30 working days” with no explanation)

The UK is the only country that has red flags

  • They claim “UK friendly” but their verification message does not match UKGC expectations.

  • They specifically target “UK without verification” but are vague on licensing.

How to evaluate a “No KYC” website claim in a secure manner (UK checklist)

This checklist was created for reducing the risk of committing fraud and clarify what you’re actually working with.

1) Verify that the operator is UKGC-licensed

UKGC clearly states that offering gambling services for commercial purposes to GB players without having a UKGC licence is illegal, which includes when an operator has been licensed elsewhere but operates within GB without UKGC license.

If there’s no definitive UKGC licensing status, then treat it as high risk.

2) Go through the verification section before you proceed with any other actions

UKGC advice for licensees is that players should be informed before they deposit funds on:

  • the types of identity document that might be required,

  • If it’s needed,

  • and the manner in which it has to be provided.

If the site’s content is unclear (“we might request information at any moment for every reason”), expect trouble.

3.) Learn the withdrawal clauses as it is a contract (because the latter is)

Check for:

  • No-hassle processing timelines

  • There are clear reasons to hold

  • Whether the operator can pause indefinitely using an unclear “security review” language

4) Check complaints + escalation route

For companies licensed by UKGC, UKGC requires that complaints handling be fair, transparent as well as transparent. The company must also provide information about escalation. For users, UKGC says you must begin by complaining to the business first.
If the problem isn’t resolved within 8 weeks it is possible to submit the action to an ADR service (free and independent).

If a website doesn’t have a complaints procedure or doesn’t mention an escalation method this is a huge red flag.

“No Verification” as well as privacy: is it reasonable vs what’s dangerous

Privacy is a normal desire. The best approach is to identify:

Respect for privacy is a reasonable expectation

  • Not wanting to upload numerous documents

  • Looking for a clear explanation of the requirements and what’s important, and why

  • Needing secure upload channels as well as transparent handling of data

Risky “privacy” motives

  • Wanting to avoid age verification

  • Wanting to bypass self-exclusion or security measures

  • The intention is to conceal one’s identities from banks

The second category pushes users to the very places where scams and non-payment are more than usual.

How legitimate businesses continue to verify that their employees are of a certain age and offer consumer protection

The UKGC’s page on the public web explains why IDs are needed to verify:

  • To confirm that you’re the right age to be able to play,

  • to confirm whether you’ve self-excluded,

  • to confirm your to verify your.

That “self-excluded” part is crucial verifying is also an integral part in preventing people from taking advantage of safeguards to avoid harm.

Withdrawal delays: the most popular “No KYC” complainant story, explained succinctly

People get frustrated because “it was working fine when I made a payment.”

A short explanation can include:

  • Deposits are easy because they transfer money into the system.

  • These withdrawals can be a bit sensitive because they are the process of taking money out.

  • It’s also the time that fraud controls or identity checks are conducted, and legal obligations are more forcefully employed.

  • The “no verification” community, certain users make use of this as a stall tactic.

The model of the UKGC aims at avoiding fraud by providing verification before making a bet on the market under regulation.

A safe and secure method to talk about “Low KYC” without advertising “No KYC”

If you want to target the exact keyword, but remain precise, use language like:

  • “Some companies make use of electronic identity checks. As such, there is no need to upload documents instantly.”

  • “However, UKGC expects online gambling establishments to confirm the player’s age and identity prior gambling.”

  • “Claims for ‘no verification” should be regarded as a high-risk signal for UK purchasers.”

This is an attack on user intention without suggesting that avoiding checks is something to be avoided.

Tables that you can insert into the page

Table: What do “No KYC” claim often hides

What do they sell
What exactly does it mean?
Why is it important
“No verification required” Verification is delayed until withdrawal Risk of higher payout friction
“Instant withdrawals” Instant Processing (not receipt) or for marketing only A confusive timeline
“No KYC withdrawals” Often, serious operators are not able to handle it. Scam correlation
“Anonymous casino” There isn’t a lot of anonymity in the majority payment systems. False expectations

Table “Good signals” Versus “bad indications” on verification pages

A good sign
A bad sign
Complete list of any documents and, if required, “We can request anything at any time” with no limit
Secure upload instructions Contacting you for documents via email/telegram
Timelines for withdrawals are clear. Vague “security review” language
Details about the process of submitting complaints and escalation There’s no way to complain.

Complaints and dispute resolution (UK): what “good” means

If you’re dealing directly with a UKGC licensed service provider UKGC demands that the handling of complaints be clear and transparent, including information on escalation and timeframes.

For players:

  • You can start by submitting a complaint directly to the gambling business.

  • If you’re disappointed, after 8 weeks you’re allowed to make a dispute to an ADR service (free, independent).

For licensees, the UKGC’s guidance on business advises you to provide written confirmation at least after the period in 8 weeks. Then, provide information about how to escalate to ADR.

This is the structure of the “dispute ladder” that is typically absent or is weak in the “no confirmation” offshore ecosystem.

Copy-ready complaint template (UK)

Writing

Subject: Formal complaint — verification/withdrawal delay (request for reason, documents needed, and timeline)

Hello,

I am raising an official complaint about my account.

  • Account ID/Username: [_____]

  • The issue: [verification required / withdrawal delayed or account restrictedIssue: [verification needed / withdrawal delayed / account limited

  • Amount: PS[_____]

  • Date/time of request for withdrawal (if pertinent): [_____]

  • Current status shown: [pending / processing / restricted]

Please confirm:

  1. The precise reason behind the delay in withdrawing or verification.

  2. The specific documents/information required (if any), and the secure method for submitting them.

  3. The expected resolution timeframe, as well as any reference IDs that are possible to provide.

You should also confirm your complaint procedure and the ADR provider if the issue is not resolved in 8 weeks.

Thank you,
[Name]

UK harm-reduction devices (important for this cluster)

Many people look up “no verification” because they are trying to evade security or because gambling is beginning to feel hard to control.

for UK residents:

  • GAMSTOP can be described as the national online self-exclusion scheme and is applicable to Great Britain. (UKGC’s page is a reference to self-exclusions as an example of the reason identification is necessary; GAMSTOP is the most practical tool for self-exclusion in GB.)

  • UKGC provides information on self-exclusion as an effective consumer protection tool.

(If you want I can include a brief section containing UK official support paths and blocking tools that are factual and non-graphic.)

Long FAQ (UK)

Are casinos that are truly “No KYC casino” realistic in Great Britain’s licensed market?

For UKGC-licensed online gambling, UKGC states that gambling sites must validate age and identities before letting you gamble, and the LCCP authentication requirement for identification requires authentication before a player is allowed to gamble.

Is it possible for a business to ask to be verified at the time of withdrawal?

UKGC declares that businesses cannot stipulate age verification or ID requirements as a condition of releasing money if it could have requested it earlier, but there could be a situation when the information is requested later to fulfil the legal requirements.

Do “no verification” websites often experience withdrawal problems?

As verification often is delayed until cashout and some operators utilize undefined “security examinations” to delay. The model proposed by UKGC is to stop the issue by requiring verification before gambling on the market regulated.

What exactly does UKGC have to say about illegal gambling that targets GB consumers?

UKGC states that it is unlawful to offer commercial gambling services to customers who reside in Great Britain without a licence from the Gambling Commission, including when an operator has a licence elsewhere, yet operates in GB without having a UKGC licence.

If I’m in dispute with a licensed UKGC operator What is the official route?

Make a complaint to the gambling company first.
If you’re still unhappy, then after 8 weeks you can refer the complaint directly to casinos with no verification an ADR service (free but independent).

What’s the single biggest scam warning in this cluster?

Any request to pay extra money to “unlock” withdrawals (fees/taxes/verification deposits), or any request for OTP codes / remote access.

Optional “SEO structure” you can use (no H1 label)

If you’re developing a website like your other clusters, then the structure that tends to work (while remaining non-promotional and UK-accurate) is:

  • Intro + “what this term means”

  • UKGC validation expectations (age/ID prior to gambling)

  • “No KYC vs Low KYC vs delayed verification”

  • The risk of withdrawal and the common delay patterns

  • Scam red flags & safety checklist

  • Complaints and the ADR ladder (UK)

  • Self-exclusion techniques and self-reduction

  • Extended FAQ

All the most important UK statements above are based into UKGC sources.


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