Monday, February 27, 2012
True Kiln Opening - Video
Here is a video I made last week after Joseph and I opened up the small wood kiln. This is a true kiln opening, not just a pottery sale! This video is also on YouTube, but for some reason I cannot upload the video into my blog at this time!
Sunday, February 26, 2012
White Clay and the Kiln Shed!
A few weeks ago we started leveling the ground out at the farm for the kiln/machine shed. It took a little while, but was ready enough to start putting holes in the ground!
Last weekend we drilled holes (thank goodness we didn't have to hand dig them) about 3.5 feet in the ground. We were going to go deeper, but the drill did not go down much further and the clay was a bit of a bear.
Now, mind you, the clay was a bear to those at the site who were NOT potters. Because the most exciting thing (to me) of the day was hitting white clay at the bottom of the holes! My brother was laughing at me I was so giddy! I do not know yet whether it is a stoneware clay, but I suspect that if the Loy potters just east of me (or southeast) had stoneware in the 19th-century, then it could be! I am hopeful and very excited!
My other half devised an attachment for the chainsaw in order to saw posts from cedar trees on our property.
Before the day was done last weekend, we put one post in the ground with three more holes dug out! It's a start!
Grading the surface |
Leveled out |
Last weekend we drilled holes (thank goodness we didn't have to hand dig them) about 3.5 feet in the ground. We were going to go deeper, but the drill did not go down much further and the clay was a bit of a bear.
Drilling |
Now, mind you, the clay was a bear to those at the site who were NOT potters. Because the most exciting thing (to me) of the day was hitting white clay at the bottom of the holes! My brother was laughing at me I was so giddy! I do not know yet whether it is a stoneware clay, but I suspect that if the Loy potters just east of me (or southeast) had stoneware in the 19th-century, then it could be! I am hopeful and very excited!
Photo inside of a post hole with white clay in the upper-right corner of the hole |
White clay! |
My other half devised an attachment for the chainsaw in order to saw posts from cedar trees on our property.
Attachment |
Sawing posts |
Before the day was done last weekend, we put one post in the ground with three more holes dug out! It's a start!
First post in the ground! |
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Teapot Challenge
Should you be looking for a good challenge, learn how to make a vessel in the manner by which another potter does. Same tools, same techniques, same weight of clay. Try teapots. Joseph had been making some teapots last week and I was watching him, seeing how he attached his spouts, made the lids, etc. By the end of the week I decided to make a few of my own, and as I went to make the teapot, Joseph said to make it in the same shape as his. This bellied-out base is somewhat harder to achieve than it may look. It certainly fooled me! I went through about 15 teapots before I really started getting the hang of it and stopped making the walls too thin!
Spouts thrown off the hump |
Joseph also has a different way of making spouts than what I was used to, so that was a bit of a late-evening nightmare trying to get the hang of it. Nothing really major to describe, just the shape, thinness, and throwing off of the hump was a lot to control!
Lids |
So I got the shape down pretty well (FINALLY), made the lids and let everything dry out a bit before assembling and putting handles on them.
Teapot bodies with spouts |
Here are my decorations in detail:
I attempted to layer the slips in order to see what the colors would do over one another |
I even put a little swirl-action on the top of the knob! |
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Frozen Studio
Last weekend we had a cold snap here in North Carolina and the temperatures dipped into the teens and twenties (Fahrenheit) with high winds. Joseph made a fire in the wood stove on Saturday, but with the winds the fire went out and the wind whipped into the studio. When I got to Joseph's on Monday, he met me at the car (first sign there was something wrong), and told me that the studio froze over the weekend, and I bravely tried not to picture all of my pots destroyed.
Frozen clay on the side of the splash pan surrounding the wheel |
Lines where the clay froze and opened up |
Lines and bubbles where the clay froze and opened up |
Friday, February 10, 2012
Handles
My usual handle |
Joseph's handle |
My attempts at making a handle similar to Joseph's demonstration |
Saturday, February 4, 2012
How do you throw?
My little corner of the world at Joseph's |
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Throwing Bigger Pieces
In apprenticing at Joseph Sand's I am learning about some of the techniques he uses to make larger pieces. While I am not up to the size of the pieces above, I did make two smaller versions of the larger vessels. I threw four roughly 10-12 pound sections this week. The bottom half has a galley and the upper half has a thin rounded edge.The bases for Joseph's pieces above are two 20 pound sections. I am working up to that! It certainly has been a learning experience to grasp (literally) how to manage large amounts of clay!
Today I joined those pieces together to make what I am plotting as a decorated water cooler. I made the lids today and will finish them up on Friday. I will try and take some more detailed photos of the process when I join the sections I made today.
Sections |
Joined vessels from the 4 sections |
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