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Pres

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  1. Google searches on Japanese pottery throwing methods do bring up quite a bit of information. You may find some Utube videos that will help you also. Years ago, I was having problems with S cracks in the bottom of small vessels off of the hump.  . a utube video showed me to make a pancake on the hump and then bring up the sides and then pull the walls. This was a Japanese method.

     

     

    best,

    Pres

  2. Hi folks, I am getting ready to get back to work in the shop and I was thinking of things I need to get ready for the work I will be doing. I have decided to do some more teapots, and chalices myself and for orders. Much of what I do is in batches, where I may throw 15 stems for chalices, and then throw 15-16 bowls. Teapots, I usually throw 6 bodies, and then the lids, and spouts.  This requires storage for the pieces until the bodies are trimmed. Same happens with the chalices. My best way of storing large amounts of pieces is to have a rubbermaid type container with a damp sponge across the bottom and a board over the the sponge. The stems are usually stored in a round container with a plate over top of the damp sponge. I know that several of you have talked about plaster in the same type of containers, but these work for me. Larger slab/wheel constructions I store under a plastic bag.

    QotW: What is your preferred method of storage for work in Progress?

  3. I also use about 5 glazes. These are glazes I had in the HS studio where I had learned which glazes played well with others. One of the advantages of teaching in a HS studio was that the students always wanted this color or that, never happy with just 5. We had I think around 20 -30 glazes. Some in small containers (qt) some in 5 gallon buckets. I make all of mine up in 5 gallon buckets as I use them for dipping and layering with spraying. I figure larger amount is OK, as they do not pancake and when Spring comes I mix what is in the buckets and double strain through an 80 mesh screen. Periodically I screen to remove any bisque or other residue.

    best,

    Pres

  4. February is almost hear, and after some time where the shop has been frozen, I have to start planning for the coming months of  getting started in the shop. February will start with  a little more clean up and organization from the November effort. However my one of my first tasks once that is done is to get a glaze load of pottery in that I held off on purpose. I had made urns for my sister in law, and my 97 yr old Dad.  The inner lids for both of those have to be fired so that the folks ashes can be sealed in for internment. I now know the dates of death that go on the top of the inside lid. Got me to thinking about what you will be doing in the shop in February, or March ceramic wise.

    QotW: What are your plans ceramic wise for February and March?

    best,

    Pres

  5. When I was teaching HS, in the Summers I ran classes for younger children in Ceramics. I had morning sessions of 2-3 hrs. We would handbuild, and I would have the kids pots in the kiln that afternoon for the bisque firing! No big secret, as I had what was known as a downdraft table (2) in the room. As soon as the students finished their constructions we would put them on the table which would be running. In about 1/2 and hour the pieces would be cheese hard, then 15 minutes later leather hard. This depending on the size of the pieces.  These tables are often used in wood working shops and industry to keep dust and fibres out of the air. If you can find one or build one they are awesome for quick work. Otherwise set up an area with lots of fans and place the pots in it upside down.

     

    best,

    Pres

  6. When working with students in the early years I had quite a bit of trouble with students not getting tight joins in slab construction, coil or when joining handles. At the time we were using slip as I did not know anything else for a proper join. I was teaching about compression to make certain the pieces stayed together, but still had problems with the joins students made. In the late 80's I came across reference to "magic water" in a Ceramics Monthly. It took me a while to decide to try it, but when I did I found that overnight my problems with joins in the student pots dropped dramatically. I also found that the joins were cleaner, and overall there were fewer gaps in all of the constructions. If you are not using it. . . I would recommend it.

     

     

    best,

    Pres

  7. Hi folks, yesterday, @Minposted in the Question of the Week pool. . . .a suggestion for QOTW would be what other creative things are you involved with? This in response to a posting by @Hyn Patty where she says I have a million other things I do. 

    QOTW  What other creative things are you involved with?

    Myself, being retired, I have quite a bit more time on my hands than many of you. Because of this my regular activities changed and expanded. Where I used to bowl 1 night a week, now I bowl 3-4 afternoons a week depending on what week it is. I also exercise quite a bit, kayak when the weather is good, paint, draw, and other artistic venues. I often work in the HS Ceramics studio in the Winter aiding the Art teacher with the adult Ceramics class I started when I was teaching. We travel, next trip a cruise at ports in Japan with excursions, and then one later in the year to Greece. Yeah, I stay busy.

     

    best,

    Pres

  8. When I was just starting out in the Art Ed department of a small state college, I had few resources to fall back on when exploring Ceramics. There was the text book Ceramics, Nelson. There was also the library that had maybe 75 to 100 books on Ceramics. There were also the Art History books that had sections on Ceramics. Occasionally I would find a Ceramics Monthly, but not much in the way of magazines. Thinking about this makes me really happy that the internet has given us much in the way of good, with some evil. Forgetting the last part I find that it is so easy to look up a potter, and technique, or explore all sorts of directions dealing with Ceramics. Often general searches though will bring me right back to the forum or some other branch of the ICA'N and Ceramic Arts Network. So just wondering. . . 

    QotW: What resources do you find yourself of ICAN origin when searching for information about Ceramics? Please be specific.

     

    best,

    Pres

  9. @Kelly in AK, I used to be the same, thinner was the mantra, especially in front of students. However, my old self would have gasped at the weight of the floor vases I have made for my wife and some others, but they do not tip over very easily and support long strands and branches without a problem.

     

     

    best,

    Pres

  10. A long time ago I used to do a demonstration of the the 3 thrown forms, Cylinder, bowl, and plate using a set amount of clay that I would divide into 3 pieces to do the demonstration. Usually this was 4# making it easy to make a small bowl, a mug and a saucer. Larger amounts allowed for larger pots. The whole idea was to get the students to understand that those were the forms that were the basis for all other forms.  I know that most of you throwers and some of you handbuilders are pretty meticulous about working with weights of clay. Give us some examples of weights for a coffee mug, or beer mug or a cereal bowl or other bowl. Pictures would be cool also.

    QotW: What can you do with ___ pounds of clay?

    best,

    Pres

  11. Looking at your pictures I agree with others that the form was thrown too thick, and needed more aggressive thinning to make up for the difference.  I Love throwing large bowls, and other forms for the kitchen, and these require a major amount of wedging of the clay, Mastering the clay on the wheel(coning up and down), and aggressive pressure from the base up into the cylinder walls. Throwing a bowl starts with a rounded interior when opening up, and most of the pressure during pulling is from the outside with more of a flat fingers on the interior keeping the curve of the base into the cylinder then when sufficient pulls have thinned the base the walls are shaped from the inside. My favorite tool for this is a large wooden spoon with the handle cut off and the edges rounded out where the handle had been attached. Whether a dish(flat interior bottom) or bowl (rounded interior bottom) the trimming is important to make certain there are no areas in the base that are thicker than normal fo any thrown piece.

    All this IMHO, meant to be helpful, not critical.

    best,

    Pres

  12. Hi folks, sorry things are late for this weeks QotW, but I have been self quarantined for much of the Christmas holiday, things are negative now.

    I know that some of you out there make your own tools, and some feel it is time consuming using the time saved with purchased items to make more pots. However, there are some of you that make your own tools, whether it be ribs, throwing sticks, dies or other things. I do wonder though how many of you make your own brushes? In the past (college days) I had access to deer hair, and some other animal hairs as I hunted and knew folks that trapped and had some other types of hair. I began experimenting with rolling the ends in paraffin, and wiring to a stick. Simple brushes, but interesting how course hair and fine hair would give me different effects, They were fun for in-glaze brush work with accents of dark stains or glazes. Their biggest attraction was the uncontrollability as compared to a commercial brush. Yet after a while, it seemed there was little time to make new, and they did not hold up well especially when dealing with some course glazes or stains. 

    QotW: Have you ever experimented with making you own brushes? Please elaborate on how you did it.

     

    best,

    Pres 

  13. Brown lung is nothing to sneeze about, but most of us will not have a problem. You may notice drops in ox levels over the years, but most of this is age. Discuss with your dr your concerns, take precautions, and really . . . don't worry.  Be proactive, clean up, keep scraps wet, cover containers, Fill containers from bags in well ventilated areas, use sponges and wet mops whenever possible.

     

    best,

    Pres

  14. I learned on motorized kick wheels @oldlady, and found the slow down speed up worked well when throwing smaller. Then as I got to throwing larger, I found that the kick wheel would torque down making centering more about time. When I started at the HS we had one small amaco 2 speed. . . .terrible. Added an Amaco motorized kick, and then a Lockerbie I think it was. However, I wanted more wheels and less space use so I sold the 3 wheels and bought a two CI wheels, one with a 1/2 horse, and one with one hp. Then we added a wheel or so a year with money from the adult classes I taught. Kicks are great if you don't worry about space or torque slow down, but in the end the modern wheels save space and are more efficient.

     

    IMHO

    best,

    Pres

  15. Hi folks, as all of you know, I was a HS art teacher for 36 years, taught a lot of Ceramics classes over the years, and saw a lot of students.  Just thinking back I remember my first experience with clay out of HS, as most of those were the standard pinch pot or coil piece and in Elementary school.  My HS experiences had all been flatwork, and one of the reasons I believed that an Art Education major should have a variety of media in their training, at not just an exposure level, but some level of proficiency. Looking back, I remember the first exposure I had to 3D media, and ceramics. . . it was an exploratory course of 3D media including ceramic. I made a ceramic box that ended up being a door stop. The teacher in the class was Stanley Zuchowski, who taught Ceramics at the little State College in northern PA.

    QotW: What was your first exposure to Ceramics at more than a primary level, and who was the teacher that introduced you to Ceramics as a viable art medium?

    I know this is a broad question, but I'm really looking for your best memories of Ceramics and of those people that influenced, motivated, and inspired you!

     

    best,

    Pres

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