Lucille Oka Posted August 12, 2012 Report Share Posted August 12, 2012 Nelly, there is no intrinsic value to having a messy wheel, or a messy splash pan. Having 2 years of accumulated clay on the wheel and in the splash pan will not make you a better potter, no just a messy one. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nelly Posted August 12, 2012 Author Report Share Posted August 12, 2012 Nelly, there is no intrinsic value to having a messy wheel, or a messy splash pan. Having 2 years of accumulated clay on the wheel and in the splash pan will not make you a better potter, no just a messy one. Dear Lucille, Absolutely. I could not agree with you more. My point in starting this thread was simply to say that all my years in classes I dreamed of leaving a dirty wheel...you know just get up, walk away and continue with life. But now with my own studio, I find myself stuck in old habits. In general, the wheel is clean at the end of the day?? Go figure?? Nelly Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LilyT Posted August 13, 2012 Report Share Posted August 13, 2012 Neither a clean nor dirty wheel makes me a better potter, alas . However, in case anyone is curious... My studio does not have running water, and my house plumbing does not have a trap for clay so cleaning is only wiping off at best. I generally scrape down the wheelhead as needed so the bats sit tight on the pins. I never clean the little table on the wheel. I just toss water onto the bone dry remnants to slake the bits before I throw, and at the end of the throwing session collect my reusable clay leftovers to wedge up. The surface doesn't get wiped. Actually I do the same thing with my plaster bat. (bonus - it doesn't need scraping and therefore has lasted many, many years). I do use different clays, but rarely reds so the little cross contamination doesn't matter to me. I allow trim scrap to build up in my splash pan because it's flimsy and a pain to get on and off. I keep trimming to a minimum by trying to trim the base of the pot as much as possible as soon as it's thrown (but of course the inside of the foot...). When I do "clean", I just scoop it out. I also do not clean my water buckets. I use the water until it's pretty thick slip, then I let that dry down while switching to a different container. When it's solidified a bit, I dump it out and reuse the container (no cleaning). When I have guests to throw in the studio, I do wipe down the tables because while I just move carefully so as to not brush crumbs of clay off and track it into the house; it's easier to just not worry about that with students. I also put towels on the floor in their splash zones since it's easier for them to throw wet. Also the trick of squeezing out the sponge without squirting takes a while to remember. The towels get rinsed off outdoors. I used to have a big trash can as a 'sink' but it just seemed a little creepy after a while because it didn't smell nice, in that sulfur rich way. And I've drifted into this non-cleaning protocol. I admit, I think I save time by not cleaning, and I save a certain amount of mental energy since I can walk away to attend to my kids at any time and then come back to it and start right up. Maybe if I could work at it all day, I'd clean as a way to get into the rhythm of things. When I used to use a public studio, there never seemed to be enough time for throwing, and I always wished I could use that extra ten to 15 minutes at the end of each session 'productively' instead of for cleaning, so maybe that's stuck with me and is my real motivation :-). Thanks for starting this interesting topic! I've enjoyed reading people's entries. -Lily Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark McCombs Posted August 16, 2012 Report Share Posted August 16, 2012 I clean the splash tray, wheel head and wipe down the wheel frame and clean my throwing tools before leaving the studio. But I am not mental about it. I think the design of these plastic, split splash trays necessitates routine cleanings. I would love to ditch that Shimpo tray and fabricate a new stainless steel splash tray for it. Trim tools are crusty and I have a wonderful combination clay and glaze on my floor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WillowTreePottery Posted August 18, 2012 Report Share Posted August 18, 2012 I have three wheels and they get cleaned when the grunge starts to interfere with putting a bat on the wheel head. I'm bad. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
msuki Posted January 4, 2013 Report Share Posted January 4, 2013 This seemed like a fitting place to ask this question. I just got an old creative industries wheel but it came without a splash guard... I'm a neat freak in the sense that I want to make sure my wheel will stay in proper working condition. The question since I've always only thrown with splash guards.... How necessary is this? I mean I know I can physically throw without the guards but do I run the risk of damaging the wheel where point of rotation meets the table? I know I could make one, but ultimately do I need to... thoughts....? (and thank you in advance) Mel Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rebekah Krieger Posted January 4, 2013 Report Share Posted January 4, 2013 I haven't been throwing long enough to know exactly what my choice will be- but my wheel does not have a splashpan. I have to drape a towl ofer my leg or wear ugly pants. I have a wet bucket that I dump out after each use, and a slip/waste bucket for the clay that I try to keep out of the wet bucket. The waste bucket gets recycled quicker because it is not as wet. (it always ends up with sediment on the bottom but I try to keep it clean so I dont dump clay in my drains) All I do is dump out the wet bucket, (usually out my back door) and wipe down the wheel (but not every part perfectly, just the head and most of the table that is attached to it) I keep things half wiped down all the time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Natania Posted January 4, 2013 Report Share Posted January 4, 2013 This has been a very interesting thread to read. I was feeling guilty about not cleaning my wheel much, while at the same time enjoying the freedom to not clean as a luxury after working in shared spaces for a long time. Now with my own studio I can leave my wheel messy, but I do clean the whole area, pan, etc. when I change from brown to white clay. Otherwise, I leave it and like the way I can just start up a throwing session quickly when I am ready. I worry a bit about dust, but it does seem that the splash pan isn't the largest contributor to this. Thanks for bringing this up! I love reading about how people deal with studios and studio practices. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mgilespots Posted January 4, 2013 Report Share Posted January 4, 2013 Dear All, Hope you aren't getting bored with my questions but am wondering about how obsessive others are with their wheels. I always thought, when I get my own studio, I will without a doubt get up after throwing and leave. Leave the mess. Allow myself the freedom from classrooms and studio cooperatives and simply allow it to be the exact way I left it after throwing. You know, covered with clay, gunge on the throwing front board or in the basin etc. But for some reason, I can't break the habit of cleaning the wheel head and the area around it. I am probably a little more fastidious given that I have a new wheel but I am not sure that is it. There is something about sitting down to a clean wheel that is nice and fresh that allows me some sort of clarity in my head. How many of you still clean your wheel head and all your tools after a throwing session? Nelly You know, I wish I was a regular cleaner. But, like so many others who have posted here, I am not. I usually leave the wheel messy after throwing, and clean up when it becomes just too darned cluttered and messy to make anything new. However, after a firing, before starting a new making cycle, I clean rigorously for a fresh start. Michael Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nelly Posted January 4, 2013 Author Report Share Posted January 4, 2013 When I first got a wheel, I had been throwing in a public studio and was used to cleaning up after every thrwoing session. So, for a few months, that is what I did at home. Gradually, I got away from this practice, although I still clean the wheelhead each time, get the clay out of my sponges and tools, and if throwing a good bit or as needed, wet mop the floor area around the wheel. When I change clay color from white to color or back, everything gets a meticulous cleaning. I also take all of the throwing excess mud, bits and pieces off and out of my 2 gallon bucket and put them on a plaster slab I have by my wheel to dry. Usually overnight turns it into stock you can wedge and get back into circulation the next time. When my throwing water gets a little bit too thick, I change buckets and let that one evaporate until it can be slopped into the plaster slab for recycling. I recently purchased a small pugmill and need to figure out how to get it into the process, as my recycling is too efficient to utilize the pugmill. My clay is part time, so maybe going full time will change that (you know, getting all the equipment while my day job is primary.) John Dear John, My clay work is also part-time. I have a potter friend locally who said, just get out in the studio every day and do something. Thus, I do just that. It may be recycling clay, turning a foot, throwing a bowl or cleaning...I just do something. It keeps me close to my work. Right now, like you, I am recycling a pail of sulpher and hopefully nice moldy trimming bits. They are on a ceramic plaster bat wrapped in light canvas. I love this clay when it is finished. When, as I was told on this forum, you mix it with some new clay it can be a dream to work with if properly wedged. I have had six weeks off...back to my day job next week. Things will slow down slightly after this time but I will, no doubt, be out there each and every day. Nelly Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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