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Mark C.

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  1. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Hulk in What’s on your workbench?   
    Working on a kiln load -bowls mugs and glasses so far. Been doing remodel work mixed in . Helping my sheet rock finisher and getting ready for new windows and the flooring guy on the 15th. Moved out of bedroom June 1st-sheet rock mud will be done on Friday -then painting before wide plank maple hardwood floors
  2. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Pres in What’s on your workbench?   
    Working on a kiln load -bowls mugs and glasses so far. Been doing remodel work mixed in . Helping my sheet rock finisher and getting ready for new windows and the flooring guy on the 15th. Moved out of bedroom June 1st-sheet rock mud will be done on Friday -then painting before wide plank maple hardwood floors
  3. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Benzine in What’s on your workbench?   
    Un loaded two kilns  this week and have dispersed most of it. I'm taking a break from clay some (still putting in a few days a week) in next 6-8 weeks.
    The last remodel project is starting on the house .Its a big one -but only one room-the main bedroom. About everything one can do to a room-
  4. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Up in Smoke Pottery in What’s on your workbench?   
    I do not use or have a damp box (never did) I use plastic sheets-some are dry cleaner bags from friends but most are plastic just a little thicker(tougher) from items we have recieved.I keep a tub full of them and use them about every day.I think I was in a dry cleaners in 1963 with my mother? but am unsure .
  5. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Rae Reich in What’s on your workbench?   
    Un loaded two kilns  this week and have dispersed most of it. I'm taking a break from clay some (still putting in a few days a week) in next 6-8 weeks.
    The last remodel project is starting on the house .Its a big one -but only one room-the main bedroom. About everything one can do to a room-
  6. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Rae Reich in What’s on your workbench?   
    I do not use or have a damp box (never did) I use plastic sheets-some are dry cleaner bags from friends but most are plastic just a little thicker(tougher) from items we have recieved.I keep a tub full of them and use them about every day.I think I was in a dry cleaners in 1963 with my mother? but am unsure .
  7. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Benzine in Skutt model 181 kiln?   
    And can someone tell me if I *Have* to have 3” bricks in a ^10 kiln?    Or can I get away with the 2.5” brick?
     
    Yes you will need 3 inch brick for cone 10 and really that is just a bare minimum .Forget about 2.5 for cone 10
  8. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Hulk in QotW: In terms of your pottery work, where do you seen yourself five years from now?   
    We have been traveling for 1 month trips for the past 3 years (this year was my wifes new hip surgery so we had a rehab break).
    You could take a year off shows with not much worry as well.
    I feel  with shows  a year off is very doable-the wholesale orders are not as flexible .My Grocery store wholesale is diffently hard to be gone with. I have had friends take in the work to the markets when I'm traveling .I like to be gone  in dead of winter months.
  9. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Benzine in QotW: In terms of your pottery work, where do you seen yourself five years from now?   
    I have a slow down plan
    My slow down plan has been in effect for about 5 years now-I cut out  5 shows in that time. One gallery went out of business  and I did not replace-one wholesale place cut their orders in 1/2.
    Thats the good news on slowing my pace but I have picked up 3 grocery store wholesale orders  two years ago. Thats been a lot of success  money wise but that means more work has happened. I no longer will take new wholesale orders.
    In 5 years I plan on doing way less production-and it may be next to none by then. Its hard for me to let go as I like certain parts still like talking to customers . Shows are hardest and the most profitable-I have 3 traveling still and 2 local ones left. These will be pared down in upcoming years.
    I may still have a few wholesale acounts and one local show in 5 years we shall see.Pottery keeps me moving (I have 4 tons to move today with a helper) it also takes it toll so its a love hate thing on the body.
    I'm throwing less this past year but I also broke nmy arm and had two months off from throwing. In 5 years my plan is alot less for sure.
    Right now I could quit (retire completly)but I like this business and am not good at relaxing.The hard part is the happy meduim.
  10. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Hulk in QotW: In terms of your pottery work, where do you seen yourself five years from now?   
    I have a slow down plan
    My slow down plan has been in effect for about 5 years now-I cut out  5 shows in that time. One gallery went out of business  and I did not replace-one wholesale place cut their orders in 1/2.
    Thats the good news on slowing my pace but I have picked up 3 grocery store wholesale orders  two years ago. Thats been a lot of success  money wise but that means more work has happened. I no longer will take new wholesale orders.
    In 5 years I plan on doing way less production-and it may be next to none by then. Its hard for me to let go as I like certain parts still like talking to customers . Shows are hardest and the most profitable-I have 3 traveling still and 2 local ones left. These will be pared down in upcoming years.
    I may still have a few wholesale acounts and one local show in 5 years we shall see.Pottery keeps me moving (I have 4 tons to move today with a helper) it also takes it toll so its a love hate thing on the body.
    I'm throwing less this past year but I also broke nmy arm and had two months off from throwing. In 5 years my plan is alot less for sure.
    Right now I could quit (retire completly)but I like this business and am not good at relaxing.The hard part is the happy meduim.
  11. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Pres in QotW: In terms of your pottery work, where do you seen yourself five years from now?   
    Gep said ( I also plan to travel, and pursue some recreational interests that I haven’t had time for while running a pottery business. )
    This is possiable as well as a pottery career . I have traveled alot on this planet as well as enjoyed lots of other activities. It can work if you schedule the times off well.
    Its worked for me since I got the travel bug in the middle 80s.
  12. Like
    Mark C. reacted to GEP in QotW: In terms of your pottery work, where do you seen yourself five years from now?   
    I posed this question because I am a big believer in long-range goals. My whole career trajectory has been based on one long range goal after another:
    Get a full-time job as a graphic designer ... become a freelance graphic designer ... buy a house ... build a pottery studio in my house and launch a part-time pottery business ... quit the design business and do pottery full-time .... renovate my studio and buy a second kiln, which caused a big increase in output ... buy a minivan, which caused a big increase in shows and sales .... 
    In recent years, my goals were all about improving efficiencies and productivity, ie making more more money with fewer pots and less labor. 
    I”m now in my 9th year of full-time pottery. I would’t trade this experience for anything. It has been as satisfying as I hoped for. But as Mark noted, it is a grind and takes a toll on your body. So I am also thinking about winding down. 
    In five years, I’d like to be living a much less labor intensive lifestyle. I don’t really want to live in a house with a yard anymore (especially on a spring day like today when I had to mow a tall and wet lawn). I’d like to live in a small, low-maintenance dwelling, which means no more pottery studio. I won’t need to earn a full-time income at that point, but I’ll probably work part-time to earn some extra income, and to stay busy. I also plan to travel, and pursue some recreational interests that I haven’t had time for while running a pottery business. 
     
  13. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from LeeU in QotW: In terms of your pottery work, where do you seen yourself five years from now?   
    I have a slow down plan
    My slow down plan has been in effect for about 5 years now-I cut out  5 shows in that time. One gallery went out of business  and I did not replace-one wholesale place cut their orders in 1/2.
    Thats the good news on slowing my pace but I have picked up 3 grocery store wholesale orders  two years ago. Thats been a lot of success  money wise but that means more work has happened. I no longer will take new wholesale orders.
    In 5 years I plan on doing way less production-and it may be next to none by then. Its hard for me to let go as I like certain parts still like talking to customers . Shows are hardest and the most profitable-I have 3 traveling still and 2 local ones left. These will be pared down in upcoming years.
    I may still have a few wholesale acounts and one local show in 5 years we shall see.Pottery keeps me moving (I have 4 tons to move today with a helper) it also takes it toll so its a love hate thing on the body.
    I'm throwing less this past year but I also broke nmy arm and had two months off from throwing. In 5 years my plan is alot less for sure.
    Right now I could quit (retire completly)but I like this business and am not good at relaxing.The hard part is the happy meduim.
  14. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Pres in QotW: In terms of your pottery work, where do you seen yourself five years from now?   
    I have a slow down plan
    My slow down plan has been in effect for about 5 years now-I cut out  5 shows in that time. One gallery went out of business  and I did not replace-one wholesale place cut their orders in 1/2.
    Thats the good news on slowing my pace but I have picked up 3 grocery store wholesale orders  two years ago. Thats been a lot of success  money wise but that means more work has happened. I no longer will take new wholesale orders.
    In 5 years I plan on doing way less production-and it may be next to none by then. Its hard for me to let go as I like certain parts still like talking to customers . Shows are hardest and the most profitable-I have 3 traveling still and 2 local ones left. These will be pared down in upcoming years.
    I may still have a few wholesale acounts and one local show in 5 years we shall see.Pottery keeps me moving (I have 4 tons to move today with a helper) it also takes it toll so its a love hate thing on the body.
    I'm throwing less this past year but I also broke nmy arm and had two months off from throwing. In 5 years my plan is alot less for sure.
    Right now I could quit (retire completly)but I like this business and am not good at relaxing.The hard part is the happy meduim.
  15. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from liambesaw in What’s on your workbench?   
    Nice photo -just do not send it to a juried show
  16. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Benzine in QothW: Does size matter?   
    In my 35 forms they vary from larger cannistyers to 20# large bowls to 1/2# spoonrests.
    Size maters depending on the form.
    For me right now the real income is in small stuff-like the 120 spongeholders I sold to one outlet-they pay the bills.
    Yes I can make the big sectional pots but I'd rather make lots of meduim bowls.I sell about 2-3 a week in my outlets where a large pots sit for 1/2 a season .
  17. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from GEP in What’s on your workbench?   
    Good luck at the show
  18. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Pres in QothW: Does size matter?   
    In my 35 forms they vary from larger cannistyers to 20# large bowls to 1/2# spoonrests.
    Size maters depending on the form.
    For me right now the real income is in small stuff-like the 120 spongeholders I sold to one outlet-they pay the bills.
    Yes I can make the big sectional pots but I'd rather make lots of meduim bowls.I sell about 2-3 a week in my outlets where a large pots sit for 1/2 a season .
  19. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Hulk in What’s on your workbench?   
    Fred Flintstone said the same thing long ago
    (no more fighting the ring and cone drive..)
    Now enjoy the modern age of the Jetsons.
  20. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Rae Reich in What’s on your workbench?   
    Work bench is now empty after packing two kiln loads-packed up my small toyota bed full with pots in boxes and dolly and took a dozed boxes in to two outlets (both consignments)
    Also finished  up packing a Large whole sale order which I droop off in Santa Rosa. on way south to SF to take my wife to her 6 week doctor check up after hip surgery.
    I'm also taking down 1bout 1200 # of scrap metal sorted into 17 different sorts-red brass-yellow brass-100 # lead ingot -400#s of wire -clean to insulated-all sorted well
    dirty brass clean and dirty copper-you get the idea no steel all higher qualities -wire is from 30 years ago working as a sparky.
    Lots of the brass is from shipwrecks over the past decades-all scrap no nice items.
    I did this sort last summer and my electrician friend has yet to take it so I'm making this a multi pot's .metal, doctor run, also bringing back a copper dive helmet and some fish prints.
     
    Liam said (I mixed up a couple new glazes and sacrificed a few pots to see what they'll look like.)
    test tiles are easier than pots especial for 1st tests
    I lost a good friend about over a year ago and yesterday I finally started to empty his pottery shop. He was my salt kiln partner.
    I am cleaning it out for his widow. mush of whats there came thru me to begin with. I worked on his glazes for many hours and brought home what I can use and we poured the water off the rest to dry them out. I am going to take the whole lot so she can have a two car space back in a ship building.
    I processed a large truck bed full today at my studio.This is a huge job and since he once was doing raku and low fire it complicates the mix. I am going to try to donate all the low fire to a school and will give some clays away as well. I found him the Geil kiln and we will deal with that later-I also brought him a small electric from one of my AZ show trips 10 years ago and he has a 3 zone new skutt electric which  will also sell in the future  year after the shop gets cleared out and some time goes by.All the kilns are in a new connected large kiln room-finished out with painted sheet rock.He fired the gas kiln twice.
    This is familiar as I have bought out 2-3 living potters in my past but this is good friend and much of what I'm moving I have handled before. It sad but I promised when she was ready I would do this for her.
    The clay and glaze and material alone will be 4-5 truck fulls.I will take a month  or more to work thru this.
    My work bench today had all his stuff on it but now its found a new spot in my stuff.
  21. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from oldlady in QothW: Is there some piece of equipment or tool that made such a huge difference to the quality of work, and quality of time, that you wished you had found out earlier?   
    For me its many things but one was my power slab roller-I knew about slab rollers but the speed my 30 inch power Baily puts out clat as well as makes any thginkness out of any firmness of clay is amazing really-just wished I got it a few decades earlier than 20 years ago
    I think the extruder which I got after about 10 years really made for stronger and faster handles-after about 20 years I got another  one as well so I have two which saves lots of time messing with size dies.
    Car kiln-well I built the 1st one in 79 and wish I had done it sooner-never looked back on that decision .To this day its saved my back loading its alight year ahead of a front loader and several light years ahead of any bend over electric kiln.
    My fans-getting out of hauling pottery's to shows with a  truck vs a van -my knessa and back all where saved -this one tyhing I should have done decades earlier -I'm on my 20 year with vans now.Yes I still use two trucks, just not for finished pottery's hauling.
  22. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from oldlady in QothW: Is there some piece of equipment or tool that made such a huge difference to the quality of work, and quality of time, that you wished you had found out earlier?   
    My pug /mixer is a 30 vpm Peter pugger
    used and shipped was 1/2 price
    i have seen a few come and go around the country since I got mine
    it fits as I wish I had it decades earlier
    i now only throw soft clay and recycle much of my scrap 
  23. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from liambesaw in QothW: Is there some piece of equipment or tool that made such a huge difference to the quality of work, and quality of time, that you wished you had found out earlier?   
    My pug /mixer is a 30 vpm Peter pugger
    used and shipped was 1/2 price
    i have seen a few come and go around the country since I got mine
    it fits as I wish I had it decades earlier
    i now only throw soft clay and recycle much of my scrap 
  24. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Pres in QothW: Is there some piece of equipment or tool that made such a huge difference to the quality of work, and quality of time, that you wished you had found out earlier?   
    For me its many things but one was my power slab roller-I knew about slab rollers but the speed my 30 inch power Baily puts out clat as well as makes any thginkness out of any firmness of clay is amazing really-just wished I got it a few decades earlier than 20 years ago
    I think the extruder which I got after about 10 years really made for stronger and faster handles-after about 20 years I got another  one as well so I have two which saves lots of time messing with size dies.
    Car kiln-well I built the 1st one in 79 and wish I had done it sooner-never looked back on that decision .To this day its saved my back loading its alight year ahead of a front loader and several light years ahead of any bend over electric kiln.
    My fans-getting out of hauling pottery's to shows with a  truck vs a van -my knessa and back all where saved -this one tyhing I should have done decades earlier -I'm on my 20 year with vans now.Yes I still use two trucks, just not for finished pottery's hauling.
  25. Like
    Mark C. got a reaction from Benzine in QothW: Is there some piece of equipment or tool that made such a huge difference to the quality of work, and quality of time, that you wished you had found out earlier?   
    For me its many things but one was my power slab roller-I knew about slab rollers but the speed my 30 inch power Baily puts out clat as well as makes any thginkness out of any firmness of clay is amazing really-just wished I got it a few decades earlier than 20 years ago
    I think the extruder which I got after about 10 years really made for stronger and faster handles-after about 20 years I got another  one as well so I have two which saves lots of time messing with size dies.
    Car kiln-well I built the 1st one in 79 and wish I had done it sooner-never looked back on that decision .To this day its saved my back loading its alight year ahead of a front loader and several light years ahead of any bend over electric kiln.
    My fans-getting out of hauling pottery's to shows with a  truck vs a van -my knessa and back all where saved -this one tyhing I should have done decades earlier -I'm on my 20 year with vans now.Yes I still use two trucks, just not for finished pottery's hauling.
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