Monday, January 14, 2013

Rookwood Pottery Kiln Lunch

My birthday was last week and after spending a few days in Kentucky doing research I had the pleasure of having lunch at The Rookwood restaurant in Cincinnati, Ohio. The restaurant is housed in the former Rookwood Pottery factory

View from my table toward the outside of the kiln
Where was my table? INSIDE OF A KILN! The meal was fantastic and reasonably priced. The flavors were great, and they had a very tasty Goetta, a Cincinnati German tradition.
Table inside of the kiln

Kiln furniture!
Having tables in the kilns gives a whole new meaning to kiln furniture! The updraft bottle kilns have fantastic acoustics.
Here are a few more photos from the restaurant:
Rookwood vessel with a mold

Chandelier in the kiln







Monday, January 7, 2013

Local Clay

My view from the wood trailer
 Some girls can be swooned with chocolate. Show me a bank of clay and I'm in heaven. While cutting firewood over the past few days I've had the opportunity to scavenge some local clay. There are two colors in the area around our farm.
The burnt orange clay
Many places have a rich red clay, but that is not to be found on our farm, or in the area much for that matter. The first layer of clay is a burnt orange color, I'm thinking it is going to be an earthenware, but may make for a great glaze. It is pretty short to play with (meaning it's not a real friendly clay to throw on the wheel), but also very smooth once you get the quartz pebbles out. I'm putting a bit aside to try as a slip.
The gray-white clay
The second color of clay is a bright whitish gray. It is below the layer of orange clay and sometimes has streaks of the orange running through it. I threw a blob of it on the wheel this afternoon, and aside from the raking on my hands from the quartz in it, it threw really well and was rather plastic (flexible, able to pull up well on the wheel). There is a TON of quartz EVERYWHERE around our farm, and I'm not talking about the rocks of quartz. The term "sandy loam" definitely applies to our farm, but the sand is a quartz sand. The entire surface after a rain has a fine dusting of quartz everywhere. I'm really hoping there might be a chance this white clay is a stoneware. Prior to buying the farm we almost did not get a site approved for a septic tank because of the clay on the property. Luckily, a septic site was found, but we have a lot of this white and orange clay on our farm. I doubt I would make a lot of pots from the clay, but it's an exciting prospect!


Saturday, January 5, 2013

Happy New Year

The dogs anticipating their Christmas treats
 I apologize for the long delay in my posting. I took a bit of a break from the pottery studio for a few weeks after the craziness of the holiday settled down. A few highlights from the break included some snow in Ohio:
Guinness the chocolate lab waiting for a snowball

Guinness thoroughly enjoyed the snow!
A venture into the world of felting:
Meet Bill, the felted Belted Galloway!

And playing with my first smartphone. I figured I officially retired my boombox (remember those?!) the other day, so the technological exchange seemed appropriate. ha!
Playing with the Instagram app
 Then it was back to work. I've been lining up my kiln firings for the coming months, and have some great pottery shows to get on the calendar! I've also been cleaning the studio and doing lots of rearranging. Today I got back to more manual labor and built a drying bed for my clay slip and unloaded about 2/3 of a sixty gallon barrel I use for storing it. Here are some photos of this venture:
Coated mesh on the base of a frame

Cotton sheet in the bottom of the frame

Clay slurry poured into the frame

Kind of looks like a Wendy's frosty!
Stay tuned to some fun pottery pieces and kiln bits I also picked up over the break! Looking forward to the new year!

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Gift Ideas!

Holiday gift package
 Have a foodie who is hard to shop for on your holiday list? We have the solution! Emmaus Farm and Liberty Stoneware have teamed up to bring you a very special holiday package! The package includes one handled mixing bowl, one bag (1.5 pounds) of NuEast Hard Red Winter Wheat flour from the farm, and a handmade cherry wood mixing spoon made by the farmer (who is conveniently a woodworker)! The bowl is the perfect size for mixing a batch of pancakes or muffins and the freshly ground flour is delicious!
We have wrapped the packages up in red and green cellophane, so you don't even have to mess with wrapping! Each package is $48 (cash), a great deal and unique gift for the holiday! Your purchase of a gift package will help us construct a barn this winter for our workshops!
 We also have hollow, round porcelain ornaments still available as well as some gorgeous flat ornaments from the recent kiln firing.
Flat decorated ornaments

Flat decorated ornaments
Contact me (libertystoneware@gmail.com) or come visit us at the Greensboro Farmer's Curb Market on Yanceyville from 6:00 am -12:00 pm this Saturday, December 22nd!
Ornaments on display
Happy holidays from Emmaus Farm and Liberty Stoneware!

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Fourth Firing Lessons

First peek into the kiln
I may have gotten a little carried away by packing my kiln with so many pots. My efforts to try and sort out some issues I was having did not include the assessment that packing my kiln the way I did would make it reduce much harder than I thought it was. The reduction of the kiln, when the oxygen is cut off, causes the iron in the clay body to be drawn to the surface, making the pottery look darker. The porcelain ornaments remained white because porcelain has no iron in it. How do I usually know it is reducing? Usually I have gotten back pressure in my front firebox, which I did not have as much of this time, and that falsely made me think I was doing okay. Sometimes I will also see little black wisps of smoke coming out of crevices at the top of the kiln when it is reducing really hard. I also did not see as much of that this time, but because the shelf was so densely packed in front of the flue, I think it was naturally reducing away the whole time!
Dark and shiny pots
On the plus side, I had little to no dry ash in this firing, and the cool corner was closer to the rest of the kiln than it has been in the last firings. I ended up starting to salt around cone 8, continuing through cone 10, and soaked the kiln for an hour after the final salting. All of my glazes fluxed smoothly and the salt coverage was pretty profound in a few places. We reached cone 11 in most places and the total firing time was even a little shorter than the last one! Here's to looking forward to firing number five!


Saturday, December 8, 2012

Fourth Firing Packed Up!

 For me, loading a kiln is like designing an exhibition. I see the pieces I have and the space I need to fit it into, and then have to figure out the spacial relationship and configuration just so in order for everything to work well. My mind works a lot in pictures, so when I was standing in the midst of all of the pots I needed to get into the kiln yesterday, I pictured the interior of the kiln and then said, "oh, crap!"
Rest assured, everything except for a few small pieces did not make it in. Lots of bigger pieces in this load. For this firing I put the larger shelf in the back with the half shelf in the front. Only by necessity did I put in another couple of shelves in the front in order to get the rest of the pots in. I'm hoping that with everything several inches from the walls and doors, and with the shelves being fairly far apart from one another, that there will still be good air flow. I am also hoping that with the larger stack in the back, that it might soak up some of the heat that comes from the front fire box and seems to escape out the chimney. 
Kiln furniture AKA flattened blobs of clay
 I'm playing with some more kiln furniture in this firing, so I will try to post something this week on my adventures in making and using kiln furniture. I'm off to bed soon for a long day tomorrow!

Monday, December 3, 2012

Missing Potter

 I apologize for being so lax in my blog posting. I thought I would share some photos of what I have been up to. Where have I been?
Lidded pickling crocks, a cooler, and compost crocks!
Here
Mixing bowls for our farm/pottery holiday package
and here
Flat ornaments
and here
Lidded pickling crocks
I haven't traveled far from my pottery wheel, but I have been away from the computer! It is great having my own kiln. The only downside is that I have not had much inventory and have been working like a mad woman to fire as many kilns as possible for the holidays. Fourth firing is this weekend!
I did get a chance to see the local Liberty Christmas parade after the Farmer's Market this past weekend, and even got my tree decorated!

Fresh pots (cross our fingers) at the Farmer's Market on the 15th!