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Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Places to buy and sell pottery online

Here are two places online where you can see what other people are making and how much they're charging for it:

Etsy is a website where hobbyists and professionals alike can offer work for sale online. There's very wide range of quality, styles and prices for pots here. Also some jewelry and non-functional items.

Akar features higher-end work by well-respected ceramic artists and potters.

Simon Leach and his brother John both have online sales galleries (Simon is in Spain, John is in the UK):

Simon Leach Ceramics

John Leach's Muchelney Pottery

Cheers,
Jay

P.S. you can see my work on my Etsy store and on my Flickr site

Last days for making pots in the Arts & Crafts Studio

Hi Folks,

Here are the official last days for making & finishing pots in the Arts & Crafts Studio at the Reitz Union:

Nov. 25: Last day for working with wet clay
Dec. 2: Last day to work with leatherhard clay
Dec. 9: Last day to bisque (work must be *bone dry* to make it in this firing)
Dec. 15: Last studio firing
Dec. 16: Last glaze firing
Dec. 18: Last day to pick up your pots

The ACC studios will be closed from Dec. 19 through Dec. 3

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Stages of a mug or cylinder

Take a look at this set of photos of the stages of a mug or cylinder. I've broken the whole process down and made cross-section photos showing where I put my fingers at each stage:

Beginning wheelthrowing

If you haven't done so already, for your 2-hour practice session this week, throw 8 1-pound mugs & keep the best two; we'll cover adding handles in class on November 5 .

-Jay

Sunday, October 4, 2009

How to make the most of your practice time



The key to learning to throw is to practice making pots -lots of pots. In addition to our 2-hour class meetings, it's a good idea to spend another two hours each week practicing on your own. During this practice session, I recommend that you throw at least 8 pieces of clay and keep 2. If you practice this way for two hours each week (in addition to class time), you'll be making pots better, faster, more accurately, and you'll find the whole process much more fun.

Here's how practice looks:

First, decide what shape you're going to make. Commit to this shape; if you decide to make a mug and it ends up looking more like a bowl, don't settle for what you get. You can do better!

Next, take about 15 minutes to set up your wheel & tools, & to wedge, weigh, & knead your clay.
You'll need 4 1-lb. balls of clay, wedged & kneaded. Tools should include the following:
  • bucket 1/2-full of water
  • 4 bats
  • towel
  • sponge
  • throwing stick
  • wire
  • needle

Then, throw each ball of clay. Spend no more than 10 minutes per piece of clay. This is very important, for 2 reasons: #1, the top layer of the clay will get too wet and sticky to work with after about 10 minutes, and #2, the more time you take, the less you make.

When a piece collapses while you're working on it, don't try to rework the same piece of clay; You'll have better results if you cut it off with your wire and start over with a fresh ball of clay. Also, instead of smooshing up the collapsed piece of clay right away, set it aside as-is, and let the surface water dry off a bit first.

When you're done with all 4 balls of clay, WALK AWAY. Take a 5-minute break; don't touch anything. Seriously, don't touch it! Get a cup of coffee, make a phone call, do some yoga, etc. This is so you can look at the pieces you've made with a fresh eye, and to give yourself some psychological distance from your pots.

Here's the hardest (and most important) part:
After a 5 minute break, come back and take a look at the 4 pots you've made. Set the best one aside to keep- and smoosh up the other 3. I know; at this point, a finished pot can seem like a miracle and smooshing it up is probably the last thing you want to do. It's easy to become so attached to all of the effort and struggle that you've put into the surviving pieces that it almost seems like murder, but you gotta rip that Band-Aid off. Besides, if you know at the outset there's 75% chance you'll end up smooshing up the piece anyway, maybe you can worry a little less about wrecking the piece that you're throwing. This is supposed to be fun & relaxing, right?

Incidentally, before smooshing, it can be helpful to cut each piece in half from top to bottom. This will reveal the cross section, and you'll be able to easily spot unevenness, thick/thin bottoms, and other trouble areas.

So, your 2 hours is about half over at this point. The second half of practice is to throw 4 more balls of clay, then clean up.

Next, wedge the smooshed pieces back up with the rest of your clay. It'll look like the clay's way too wet, but trust me, it's not; that's mostly surface water. After a couple of minutes of wedging, the clay won't seem so sticky anymore.

Weigh out & knead 4 lbs of wedged clay, then cut it into 4 1-lb. pieces.

Then, throw each ball of clay same as before: Spend no more than 10 minutes per piece of clay; cut off collapsed pieces right away; walk away for 5 minutes when you're done with all 4 pieces; keep the best one & smoosh up the other 3.

Finally, take about 10 minutes to finish up: wrap up the pieces you've kept and put them on the class shelf; bag up your clay, clean off tools & wheel &c.

So, to recap, your 2-hour practice time should look something like this:

Set-up & clay prep: about 15 minutes
throw 4 balls of clay: 20-40 minutes
take a break & wedge clay: about 10 minutes
throw 4 balls of clay: 20-40 minutes
take a break & clean-up: about 15 minutes

Any remaining time you can use to glaze, soften or reclaim clay, pull handles, finish leatherhard pots, clean up greenware, etc.

At the end of your 80-120 minutes, you should have 2 pieces to keep and a bag of nice soft clay.

One last thing: it's not going to be frustrating forever; if you don't give up, at some point it really is fun! My take on it is that if it was easy, it wouldn't be worth doing.

Keep practicing!

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Mugs: Beginning Throwing week 4

Simon leach throws mugs: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A7v_s7kL-Jg

For your 2-hour practice this week, throw 8 mug bodies and keep the best 2.

Next week, we'll look at how to make handles for your mugs.

See you next Thursday!

-Jay

Monday, September 28, 2009

Notes on Glazing (Beginning Throwing Week 3)

Hi folks,

No videos this week, but below is a PDF document with some notes on glazing your pots. Remember to wax the bottom!:
Notes on glazing


During 2-hour practice this week:
  • Finish leatherhard bowls from last week & put on shelf to dry
  • Finish bone-dry bowls & put on "ready to bisque" cart
  • Glaze any bisque pots & put in kiln room for glaze firing
  • If you have time, practice making bowls on the wheel (throw 8 1-pound pieces of clay, keep 2)

Next class, we'll look at making mugs on the potters wheel.

Cheers,
Jay