Joy Tanner & Will Baker
Alchemy of Clay
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Saturday, October 22, 2022
Spruce Pine Potters Market 22 - Joy Tanner & Will Baker
Friday, October 21, 2022
Spruce Pine Potters Market 22 - Pam Brewer
Gratitude is universal spiritual wisdom, and it is sufficient. |
TERRY PATTEN |
Monday, October 17, 2022
Spruce Pine Potter's Market 22 - Cynthia Bringle
Saturday, October 15, 2022
Spruce Pine Potters Market 22 - 4 more potters
Thursday, October 13, 2022
Spruce Pine Potters Market '22 - 3 more potters
OK, I thought I got people's names with their pots. But these may be mixed up and I apologize to the artists.
Me and Terry Gess and Cathy at Terry's booth.
Cathy also purchased some of Terry's bowls.
Wednesday, October 12, 2022
Spruce Pine Potters Market '22 - Artists 1 & 2
1. Gertrude (Gay) Smith has wonderful designs. Here's her web site. gertrudegrahamsmith.com/
Saturday, July 16, 2022
Glaze tests for pottery are weighed, like the Sepia Saturday guys on a scale!
I would rather be the man who bought the Brooklyn Bridge than the one who sold it. -Will Rogers, humorist (4 Nov 1879-1935)
My weekly contribution to Sepia Saturday continues, though I slide off the meme often. I sure enjoy reading other folks contributions though! Also posted on When I Was 69 blog.
This week we have...
My closest use of a weighing scale was when I was mixing glazes in pottery testing, to see if I could come up with a glaze that did something I wanted, or to see if it came up with something else entirely.
Unfortunately I don't have photos of all those tests. But let me check and see if I blogged about them...so there might be some old posts somewhere...
A glaze combo that I liked, first the whole vase is submerged in matt black glaze (studio recipe) after drying for a few hours, I brushed a liberal coat of white glaze on it. The clay itself is a white body, so when the glaze breaks the clay that shows is a slightly different shade of white.This is my glaze recording sketch book. I have those few "OK" circles when something came out somewhat the way I liked.
This test bowl has a base glaze but with different streaks of other glazes across it...so I can see what is most compatible.
Here I threw a lot of little vases off the hump (a big lump of clay on the wheel) and then tried different glaze combinations...some of which were recorded in the sketch book.
I used a formula for Snowflake Glaze which I found in Ceramic's Monthly magazine...so I mixed the basic colorless glaze, tried it on top of some detailed colors. It only gets the pretty crystals on the insides of things, where it is pretty thickly applied.
Here's a selection of glazes over the base glaze of Eggshell.
There's a huge display of all the glazes available in the studio on the wall. Of course people can also purchase ready made glazes, or formulate their own from reliable recipes.
I even bought a book by a local glaze master, John Britt, all about cone 6 glazes. Didn't get much use, because I retired from making pottery 2-1/2 years ago.
I do miss my friends at the studio, but with COVID I just have stayed away for the last 2 years, while they put in lots of restrictions as to how many potters could be in the studio at a time, etc.
Sharing with my art blog "Alchemy of Clay"







