Friday, January 24, 2014
a woodworker does pottery
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what you are going to see in this blog post is a smallish dan mosheim pottery show. i have been fooling around with clay for about 10 years now, and have taken classes with nick seidner of rising meadow pottery, kate geotz of hartsboro pottery in wallingford, vermont and lauren silver, the pottery teacher at burr and burton academy in manchester. i learned a little from all of them, but mostly from fooling around on my own over the years.
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my new thing is a combination i dreamed up of slab pottery and wheel thrown pottery mixed together. its sort of how you might approach larger pieces if you were a woodworker and couldnt get it together to throw anything larger than about 6" in diameter and 4" tall ... i explain it all at the end of this post, but in the meantime, below are some of the highlights from the service for 12 im working on for our own house. im about 2/3rds through ... i need just a few more soup bowls, about 8 bread and butter plates and a few larger serving pieces and platters. click the photos to enlarge them ...
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these two and the red and black one at the top of the post are 7" bread and butter plates
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some 9" soup bowls.. hot ones
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and a 10.5" dinner plate
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my collection of new and old stuff at open studio this year
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ok, heres the secret. i cheat. i made a collection of mdf forms on my lathe that you can see in the picture below. rough them out on the bandsaw and turn them close to the same, freehand, on my lathe.
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then i roll out a .22" thick slab and drape it over the upside down form, trim it to the edge of the form and center it on the wheel using the pins and holes i drill in the bottom of the form. next i compress it tight to the form by hand and throw a little rolled out snake foot onto the bottom of the slab on the wheel. you can see the end of that process below.
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after they dry two or three days under plastic, i trim them very quickly and loosely on the wheel and color the bottoms with duncan cover coat. love the colors they have.
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my stack of plate forms
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then, after struggling for a week or two, i turned the thing above with pin holes and i can center the plate or bowl right side up in the recess, and add the color to the top. after they dry for a week or so, its off to janno for a bisque fire, and then a clear glaze fire. im looking for my own small kiln, so if anyone knows of one for sale, please let me know.
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fun, peaceful, quiet, not too expensive, functional, lovin it ...
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johns .. target with plaster casts
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ken noland, a local guy, who taught at bennington college, beginning
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pottery,
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