Face Jug Workshop

Rob Withrow and Ted Cooley came to visit Southwestern Community College’s Heritage Arts program in Bryson City, North Carolina to show off their face jug style. They did a great job entertaining and teaching us how to make colorful, funny face pots.

Of course, the night started off with a pot luck, which means lots of fabulous food! Then Rob began working on his pots (about 3 feet each). Rob also brought one of his signature piggy bank pigs. When he and Ted were done with their first face, it was time for the students to get to work on their own.

This was a great workshop to share traditional Appalachian style pottery. Perfect for a school located in Western North Carolina! And all of our face pots will end up in our Manabigama kiln! Can’t wait to share those photos!

Enjoy the slideshow of the workshop!

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Inspiration

I promised myself I would post a new blog post every Monday with a theme from my love of teaching.  Well, my last minute idea is about inspiration, specifically one of the many things that inspired my current work.  (This may not be a teaching post, but it may inspire ideas for students of pottery….)

Paper Cup and holder

Blast from my past - paper cup and plastic holder

My father owned his own business while I was growing up.  Actually, he owned several, as great entrepreneurs tend to do.  I have a fond memory of the water cooler in his store.  This cooler offered both cold or hot water and had cone-shaped paper cups in a dispenser on the side of the cooler.  Those paper cups would burn your hand with hot water, unless you used a little plastic holder with handle.  This was a reusable sleeve that offered a handle to keep your fingers away from the heat.  I found this plastic holder and cone-shaped cup to be intriguing.

As I began flirting with clay in my basement, after dedicating my time to librarianship for 5 years, I tried all kinds of shapes in the round.  I was searching for a form that I enjoyed making, was challenging enough not to bore me but also easy enough to make so that I could make enough to sell at a reasonable price; after all, I am a functional potter, not a clay sculptor.  Sure, I could have gone back to the pots of my past, but I no longer had access to a soda kiln to get the old decorations back, and I was using a new clay in a new place.  Time for a change.

The potter’s wheel is only limited to round if you choose to leave the clay alone after forming your pot.  Play led to my flirting with ovals, squares, darts, etc.  Cutting and re-attaching clay (darting) or attaching bottoms to pots thrown with no bottom and ovaled seemed too complex for my idea of ease in process.  Then I remembered that plastic cup holder and thought I could use that idea to highlight the red clay by making the glazed part  look as though it was sitting within the bottom, unglazed earthenware.  This is all done while forming on the wheel – no need for attaching, unless handles are added.

mugs, stacked

Previous work - mugs inspired by plastic cup holder

Well, this got a bit boring.  It wasn’t challenging enough.

One spring day in the studio, after working in my garden, I came upon a budding flower and thought about how the green stem holds the paper-like flower within…. just as my inspirational plastic cup holds the paper cup within.  Flowers are much more beautiful than plastic/paper cups… and I am a novice gardener.  So why not see if I can reference a little bud in my pots?

Budding Flower - inspiration

generic Budding flower image thanks to pdphoto.org

And so I began to think of ways I could alter my pots just a bit more to make them unique, fun and a challenge to make, not too fussy as to become too expensive to create, beautiful, functional and referencing my love of my natural surroundings, specifically my garden sitting above this rich, red clay of Western North Carolina.  And of course, still working with that first image of my cone-shaped paper cup sitting in a plastic holder with handle.

A little practice and patience and I found a tool that I could use to dimple my pots, take them out of round, and reference the multiple layers of a flower coming up from the stem.  I like the way  food looks in these altered shapes, too.

Soup in Pincu Pottery Bowl

Phil Gelb, a fabulous vegan chef in Oakland, CA and Cori Spence, assistant cook and food photographer, use my bowls!

And so I have been working with this idea ever since.  I play with new inspirations and attempt to create new ways of decorating, but the shape concept continues….

Currently, I am working on looking at a new inspiration that has come to me since making this work – fluted Korean celadon pots from 918–1392.  Keep tuned in to see if they inspire a new decorating technique, shapes, or who knows!

What inspires your pottery?

Tools for Throwing

Pottery Tools I Use

I Love My Tools!

I was asked the other day to talk a little about the tools I use most often in the studio to make my pots. Well, here they are:

A typical tool kit for beginning pottery students usually includes the needle tool, cut-off wire, one or two ribs – metal and/or wood, one wooden knife tool and one or two trim tools. If you must buy a kit, buy a DooWoo kit.
Over time, a potter improves upon their basic tools, out of necessity, desire for more tools or because one or two tools went missing.

Here is a list of the tools in the picture and how I use them:
Dolan Trim Tools: A MUST! These babies are sharp and come in many shapes for a truly pleasurable trim job. Remember that all the metal is sharp, so learn to maneuver the tool to get the best cut – don’t just use the widest part but try using the round corners, etc.
Wax Brushes: I use an oil-based wax to paint on top of one glaze and then dip into another for a layered effect. The brushes stay soft when in water with a drop of dish soap.
Slip Bucket: Didn’t come with the kit, but boy do we need one! And I choose not to clean it after every throwing session – the slip adds up, gains a nasty smell, but is pretty handy when I slip ‘n’ score those handles! When it’s full, scoop out the clay onto a plaster bat and pretty soon you have more clay!
Ribs: The large wooden one is for low bowls, plates and platters – it really helps to have a stiff, large, rounded rib for these shapes. The green ribs are MudTools rubber ribs. I like the lime-green ones that are flexible but not soft like the red ones. I use them in place of the metal rib – helping me shape, dry the pot and compress the clay.
Sponge: This happens to be the foam from the box of cones I use in my firing. It is my favorite sponge for throwing! Holds water, almost chamois-like in feel and thin to hold.
Cut-off Wire: That one that comes in the kit gets kinks, then breaks. You can buy another – and I advise you to buy a DooWoo or MudTools brand – or make your own. this one is a piece of dowel and nylon fishing string twisted and glued to the dowel. Leaves a nice pattern on my feet.
Fettling Knife – I really like the clay knives that aren’t sharp but cut clay and don’t stick like small kitchen pairing knives. You need something to cut your clay when cutting slabs, handles, etc. An X-acto knife is my next best.
Calipers: I like how these fit in your vessel at one end and the lid fits in the other end. Simple to use and helps with those pesky lid fits!
Ruler: I actually measure the width of my cake plates & dinner plates and height of pitchers and lamps. Also a great straight edge for cutting those slabs of clay!
Wooden Modeling Tools: The wooden knife helps trim extra clay at the bottom of pots before cutting them off the wheel. This is especially helpful when I won’t be trimming the pot. The other wooden finger tool is used to smooth clay in places my finger won’t reach. I LOVE THIS TOOL! Especially helpful to smooth around attachments like handles.
Trim Blade: I use this baby to trim the extra clay on pitchers. ‘Why not use a Dolan,’ you ask? Well, a pitcher has a spout by the time it’s leather hard, so I trim it right-side-up. This tool allows me to trim a nice foot at the base of the pot. I throw the pitchers with a thin enough bottom to not need to be turned over and trimmed.
Rubber Shaper: The tool I use for making those Pincu Pot indents. Also helpful to smooth over rough spots instead of that wooden finger I spoke of earlier.
Serrated Rib: Makes scoring a bit quicker and easier. Just remember not to be timid with your scoring.

Those are my favorite tools.  What is in your tool box?  Do you have certain tools you use daily?