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Bisqued platter with carving and underglaze decoration |
Friday, 28 August 2015
Although I don't have a photo of the glazed version of this piece, I've posted below a pic of this platter when it came out of the bisque firing. This pot went to a good home via a silent auction at a recent fundraising event for managing Westport's stray/feral cats.
Thursday, 20 August 2015
I recently watched a lecture given by potter extraordinaire, Adam Field. Among many other experiences, he spent a number of months in Korea learning how to make very large, traditional fermentation jars called Onggi. This is a link to a time lapse video showing Adam working on an onggi, check it out!
Adam Fields onggi
Adam has also uploaded a selection of his photographs on Instagram that, among other things (ie family shots), encompass unique images of patterns occurring in nature.
https://instagram.com/adamfieldpottery
Adam Fields onggi
Adam has also uploaded a selection of his photographs on Instagram that, among other things (ie family shots), encompass unique images of patterns occurring in nature.
https://instagram.com/adamfieldpottery
Sunday, 2 August 2015
We survived pottery bootcamp!
We headed off to the Haliburton School of Arts last Sunday for 5 long days of throwing class taught by Rene Pettijean.
Aside from the incredibly hot weather, which translated into an equally incredibly hot pottery studio, it was a great 5 days of revisiting the basics of throwing on the wheel. There were 16 of us, all at varying stages in our pottery "careers". We were challenged by Rene to use some discipline in throwing the same sized/shaped objects - discipline that I don't normally practice! (Throwing is too much fun to be disciplined about it). We got lots of demos by Rene and one-on-one assistance when requested. The group was very interactive and ready to constructively share their experiences.
One of many things I learned was that I don't plan my throwing projects well enough. Using Fibonacci numbers we were asked to design mugs, throw them, & attach handles.
Above are the 5 I put handles on out of 9 cylinders I started with. The shape on the far right is what I started with, then I redesigned to the shape on the left and tried a few small variations (really - these didn't just "happen"). Turns out, I liked the original version the best once the handles went on! When I got home I redesigned the shape on the left to flare out a bit at the base to balance out the form and will try to throw a few of these. These handles were pulled, then attached to the mugs and pulled some more - I let mine dry out too much so the handles are pretty wonky, but it was certainly good practice. Many, many pots went straight into the pug mill so that we could reuse the clay the next day - it was kind of refreshing to "kill" so many pots!
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Rene spiral wedging clay |
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Key step in opening clay in preparation for raising the wall |
Aside from the incredibly hot weather, which translated into an equally incredibly hot pottery studio, it was a great 5 days of revisiting the basics of throwing on the wheel. There were 16 of us, all at varying stages in our pottery "careers". We were challenged by Rene to use some discipline in throwing the same sized/shaped objects - discipline that I don't normally practice! (Throwing is too much fun to be disciplined about it). We got lots of demos by Rene and one-on-one assistance when requested. The group was very interactive and ready to constructively share their experiences.
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Setting a rim on a jar. |
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Throwing the top of a 9 lb vase |
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5 bisqued souvenirs from bootcamp |
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