Pottery Making Fal00
Pottery Making Fal00
Pottery Making Fal00
2 Fall 2000
Features
The Japanese Technique of Hump Throwing.................9
by Mel Jacobson
Learn how to throw off the hump using a method
handed down for generations.
Small Treasures.............................................................25
by Dannon Rhudy
Shaking things up a little.
Its Extraterrestrial!.......................................................37
by Craig Hinshaw
Children explore space when modeling planet surfaces in clay.
Departments
ClayLinks by Barbara Coultry.........................................................................6
MuseumsTour pottery collections around the world.
Down to Business by Chris Campbell............................................................40
Are You Ready?Three easy steps to determine
if youre ready to put your work on the market.
The Budget Potter by Sylvia Shirley...............................................................42
Clay Slip ProcessingA scrap pail with a twist.
Off the Shelf by Sumi von Dassow................................................................. 46
Southwest Indian PotteryThe rich culture of Native Americans
revealed in this quality selection of books.
Cover: Tea bowl, approximately 5 inches in diameter, reduction fired to Cone 11,
by Mel Jacobson. See story on page 9.
Copyright 2000
The American Ceramic Society
All rights resewed
www.ceramics.org
4 Fall 2000
Pottery Making illustrated 5
Huge, old and dusty, the natural history museum awed me
with its three-story ceilings and its echo of my little-girl
voice. This was the museum of my childhood, and I thought
it defined all museums. My dictionary describes a museum as
a building where objects of permanent value are kept and
displayed, but it leaves out the beloved description of huge,
old and dusty. It also fails to mention that a building in this
day and age can be electronic. Take a tour of these brave new
by Barbara Coultry museums, without the dust and echo.
10 Fall 2OOO
Step 7 Step 8 Step 9
Precision is needed to cut the pot from Place the cut-off tool with your left hand After you have cut the pot from the hump,
the wheel, and a cut-off string (see box) against the groove, and fling the string pluck it off the spinning wheel with the
is used. Form a small groove at the base around the pot with the right fingers as fingers and place it on a flat board. Start
of the pot with the index fingernail. Make you pull the tool horizontally away from the next pot by drawing out a new disc or
this groove fairly deep. Judge the depth the pot. The string slices the pot from the pancake, and repeat the entire process.
of the bottom of the pot and make the hump. When the pots are leather hard, place
groove for the string at a place that will them upside down on a clay chuck the
give the pot a 1/4-inch footring. It is imper following day and trim them with an exact
ative that you do not leave large amounts measured footring. The process of mak
of clay at the bottom of the pot, as it ing footrings takes several minutes
takes a great deal of time to trim that clay longer than the throwing process.
away, and those are precious
minutes when making perhaps 40 pots
an hour.
ty to live and work in a Japanese pottery for Mr. Kunio Uchida, 1972.
a year. I worked long hours, became very dis
ciplined in my work habits, and develope
very tight set of muscle memory systems that
I still have 28 years later.
12 Fall 2000
Tea bowl, 5 inches in diameter, reduction fired to
Cone 11.
Once you throw the first six to Shino teapot, 9 inches in height, reduction fired to
18 Fall 2OOO
T hrowing C lay
Fall 2OOO
P r e v e n t i n g S-C r a c k s
5 Steps to
Prevention
S-cracks can be averted by the
correct precentering technique,
which involves pulling the clay up
into a cone shape and then push
ing it down before opening stage
takes place in the throwing oper
ation. The technique is some
times called coning.
Note: Directions apply to pot Step 1 Step 2
ters throwing counterclockwise. Center the clay. Use equal pressure with Pull up the cone. Wet the centered clay
the right palm pushing down and the and grasp it with both hands. As the
edge of the small finger on the left hand wheel is turning, apply equal pressure
resting lightly on the bat. Make sure the inward with both hands to bring the clay
left hand is positioned straight up at a up into a cone-shaped form. As your
right angle to the bat before pushing in hands move up the form, apply
toward the center. When used with the increased pressure equally with the
correct amount of water, the equal pres index fingers and thumbs of both hands.
sure down with the right palm and the
pressure of the left hand pushing in
toward the center of the bat will result in
a centered piece of clay.
Step 5
The centered shape. The height and
width of the centered form helps deter
Step 4 mine the proportion of the object to be
thrown. Horizontal forms, such as plates,
Push the cone down. With the left hand start with a wider base than narrow-
pushing toward the center and the upper based forms such as cups.
Step 3 palm of the right hand exerting slightly
more pressure in a downward direction,
Repeat the coning process several press the cone shape into itself. If the
times. Always start from the base. The form takes on a mushroom shape as it
form should look more like a cylinder is pressed downward, increase the pres Jeff Zamek is a ceramics consultant residing in
than a pyramid. When it is complete, it sure with the left hand pushing toward Southampton, Massachusetts, and is the author of
should have a slightly wider base. the center as the wheel spins. What Every Potter Should Know. Contact Mr.
Zamek by e-mail at fixpots@aol.com
Pottery Making illustrated
Why do corrections for the S-crack problem work for
some potters, while being ineffective or inconsistent for
others? Below are some of the methods used to prevent
S-cracks. Some corrections do in fact work at times, but
When bringing the clay when they succeed, they do so because in some way
up into a cone shape, be they have aligned the clay platelets in the base of the pot
sure to keep the base of with the clay platelets in the walls of the pot, allowing
the cone narrow (A). A
both to shrink at a compatible rate. The most effective
wide base (B) will defeat
way to solve the S-crack problem is to pull the clay up
the purpose of the pre
ventive procedure that into a cone before the centering operation takes place.
calls for a narrow base.
If you create a recessed The Myths of S-cracks
or concave area on the
top of the cone, the clay Forcefully throwing the clay on the bat
platelets will not align Whether the moist clay is thrown, dropped or placed on the
correctly (C). When the bat is unrelated to the formation of S-cracks.
cone is pushed down and
the clay finally centered, Changing the clay body
the beginning of an S- Some potters report an improvement when they change clay
crack may form (D). body formulas. While a different clay body might temporar
ily or sometimes permanently resolve the problem, it doesnt
address the actual cause of the defect.
Cutting the pot from the bat after throwing
After the pot is thrown on the wheel, a cut-off wire is passed
between the bottom of the pot and the bat. The assumption
being it will relieve the pressure on the base of the pot as it
dries on the bat.
Using a different type of bat
Throwing bats fall into two categoriesnonabsorbent, such
as plastic, or absorbent bats made from plaster, wood, parti
cle board, etc. The absorbency characteristics of the bat do not
promote or hinder the formation of S-cracks in the pot.
Ribbing the inside or outside bottom of the
pot when leather-hard
Another Ucureyyfor S-cracks is to rib the inside bottom of the
pot before it is removed from the wheel. A similar technique
involves running the rib on the outside bottom of the leather
hard pot once it has been taken off the wheel. While press
ing a rib over the surface of a pot does align the clay platelets
in a circular direction (which is beneficial) it does not do the
same for platelets below the surface layer of clay.
Smoothing the bottom of clay before throw
ing it on the bat
During the wedging operation, creases or lines can form in
the bottom part of the clay that contacts the bat. S-cracks can
form whether the bottom of the clay is smooth or creased.
Using harder or softer clay for throwing
The moisture content of the clay is irrelevant to the forma
tion of S-cracks.
Slow drying pots to prevent cracking
Slow drying of the completed pot will not prevent the devel
opment of S-cracks. Slow drying will only delay the time
until the cracks are discovered. As a general rule, once cracks
are formed, they stay the same or get worse as the clay dries
and is eventually fired.
22 Fall 2000
Pottery Making illustrated 23
24 Fall 2000
by Dannon Rhudy
Making small and relatively inexpensive items adds a bit
of spice to a potters repertoire. Items, such as mugs, spoon
rests and trivets, are among the most common, but if youre
looking for additional quick and easy ideas, try this simple
one-piece salt (or pepper or spice) shaker. These shakers are Shaker, porcelain with turquoise matt
popular with buyers, intriguing for students and ideal for glaze with titanium crystals, fired to Cone
10 reduction.
class assignments.
Thrown in one piece, these shakers require only wheel
trimming and are very quick once the idea has been practiced
a couple of times, and theyre suitable for any throwing clay
body and temperature range from low fire to Cone 10. These
shakers can be made in any useful size, and the shapes can
be altered after throwing if desired. An added bonus is that
salt does not tend to clump in these little gems, probably due
to the slight porosity of the unglazed interiors.
Shaker, stoneware with Shino glaze, Red set, porcelain with copper red glaze, Shaker, porcelain with Shino glaze, wood
fired to Cone 10 reduction. fired to Cone 10 reduction. fired to Cone 10.
26 Fall 2OOO
Step 7 Step 8
If desired, leave enough clay at the clo Once the outer form is closed, you can
sure to make a small knob for lifting. easily manipulate the knob to whatever
shape you prefer, because the trapped
air will prevent the collapse of the piece.
Tip: If you do make a knob, be sure to
undercut it sufficiently to make it easy to
lift the shaker when its glazed and in use.
Finishing Touches
No further trimming is needed, you can put a drop of wax over the hole,
except perhaps a light sanding of the or put a piece of bamboo skewer in the
bottom when the piece is dry. Some hole while youre glazing. The inside of
people like to put a small needle hole inthe form does not need to be glazed.
the side of the outer form to release Clean the foot as you usually would for
trapped air while the piece is drying. If your glazes and fire.
you do this, remember to smooth a bit These little shakers can be made in
of clay over the hole once the piece is matched sets, but there is no real reason
leather hard or the shaker may leak. to do so. If each piece is merely similar,
Bisque fire as usual. If you dip-glaze or glazed similarly, they make clever sets.
these shakers, it is easiest to turn them They can be incised with S or Salt,
upside down, grasp with tongs and dip P or Pepper, or anything one might
into the glaze. Trapped air will prevent wish. These designations can also be
glaze from filling up the inside of the made with a brush and oxides, slips or
shaker or the hole.To be on the safe side,whatever you choose.
Pottery Making illustrated 27
28 Fall 2000
by Chris Henley
Many potters find it difficult to make a lump of
clay emit a sound more pleasing than the splat that
they get from throwing it against the wall. Satisfying
as that can be, it doesnt offer quite the same range of the process
tones you can get from a clay wind instrument. Here
is a guide to help you take a mute wad of clay and
turn it into your very own clay whistle. Once you get
the hang of it, whistle making will be like riding a
bicycle, and with imagination and a bit of experi
menting, this technique can open a lot of possibilities
in the whistle world.
Step 1
Start with a ball of wedged clay about two
inches in diameter. Use your favorite throw-
inglhandbuilding body, but any reasonably
plastic clay will do.
Tip: Avoid heavily grogged clays or clays with
extremely fine particles, because they will pre
sent problems when forming the whistle
A clay whistle can take any shape or form wedge and air slot.
the only requirement is that it be hollow.
Chris Henley has been a part-time potter for 33 years. Form a pinch pot. The 2-inch ball of clay is just
He lives and maintains a small studio in Encinitas, a starting point. The hollow form you make is
California. He developed this whistle-making technique the whistle chamber, and its size determines
in the early 1970s while living in Raquira, a small pot the tonethe smaller the chamber, the higher
tery village in the Colombian Andes. Please send your the tone. Keep the wall thickness as uniform
comments and questions to him at dch999@hominid.net, as possible.
or visit his website at wunv.hominid.net/chris.htm where
you can see a modified version of this sequence. An
interesting alternative method with tuning instructions can
be found at www.geocities.com/RainForest/Canopy/
2525/whistles /whistle, html
30 Fall 2OOO
Step 10 Step 11 Step 12
Working at eye level, make 3 or 4 more Complete the slot. Gently insert the nee The ridge is like a little bridge that forms
holes parallel to the first guide hole. It is dle tool in one of the guide holes, and the roof of the air slot. This slot directs
important that the floor of the air slot be move it side to side, not up and down like the air across the wedge and creates
even with the thin edge of the wedge a seesaw. Enlarging the hole by moving the dynamics that produce the sound.
(edge of hole across from the air slot). If side to side clears out the little bits of clay Be sure the slot is clean and clear of
you do not keep the tool parallel to the separating the guide holes. This forms clay debris.
top surface of the whistle body as you the slot.
pierce the ridge, you wont get a peep!
Also, this air passage has to be a slot,
not a round hole.
troubleshooting
If you get no sound on the initial try, do the following:
1. Check lip placement. Are you blocking the air
passage?
2. Check alignment. Is the air slot distorted, or the
wedge out of alignment?
Step 13 3. The position of the slot may be directing the air
above or below the wedge. Air slot was not formed
Try out the whistle by carefully putting your lips on the end of
so that the wedge splits the air. The floor of this slot
the slot and blowing. Do not hang your lip over the slot, and be
should be nearly even with the thin edge of the
very gentle because the clay is still moist and can easily be dis
torted. Small chambers tend to produce a high tone and may wedge. Plug the wedge hole, smooth over the ridge
require a good blow to get the sound. Larger chambers tend to and go to step 7.
produce a lower tone and may sound only with a soft, gentle 4. Air slot is not a slot. Typically, beginners tend to
steady breath. If the whistle doesnt work now, it wont miracu make this air passage a round hole instead of a slot.
lously start after its fired. Now that you have it whistling, and
5. Debris is clogging the air slot. Check both sides. Be
maybe even producing more than one tone, put it down and
leave it alone until it dries. cautious in clearing this and dont distort by enlarg
ing it or changing its angle relative to the wedge.
6. Secondary tone hole is too large. Plug it up and try
again.
7. If none of the above solutions works, start over. Its
only clay!
Part 1
Before class, I rolled out 8-inch circles of clay,
approximately -inch thick, for each student. Plastic
wrap was placed over the inverted plastic bowl to keep
the clay from sticking to the plastic bowl. The clay disk
Terra cotta was used for the Martian surface. was pressed and paddled over the plastic bowl. Craters
were made by pressing a toilet paper tube into the clay,
creating a circle, then pinching and
shaping more clay around the imprinted circle (see
figure 1). Rocks were made by rolling small balls and
flattening them on the desk surface.
Part 2
Astronauts were made by pressing clay
into plaster press molds of small plastic
replicas of astronauts. I had purchased the
replicas at a teachers store and made one-
part plaster molds ahead of time (see
Making a Press Mold on page 38).The stu
dents easily learned how to press soft clay
into the mold, pull it out and use a needle
tool to trim away excess clay.
Figure 1
Part 3
Making craters.
The students referred to pictures or plastic
replicas when making landing modules and
lunar rovers. Toothpicks were used for mod
Figure 2 eling detailed work. Water was brushed onto
Craig Hinshaw is an elementary art specialist in the the astronauts feet and equipment to secure
them to the planets surface (see figure 2).
Adding details.
Lamphere School District in Madison Heights, Michigan.
E-mail comments to Craig at craighinshaw@hotmail.com.
Pottery Making illustrated 37
Finishing the Project
At the end of the hour, the clay
was lifted off the plastic bowl, plas
tic wrap pulled away and initials
scratched in the base. After bisque
firing, low-fire underglazes were
brushed on. Color pictures and the
plastic replicas were helpful as stu
dents strove for accuracy in glazing.
The detail, accuracy and charm of
each small sculpture is amazing, con
sidering they were made by elemen
tary students. Presenting the project
in specific steps made a complex- Step 1 Step 2
looking project successful. A plastic toy astronaut is embedded A clay mold box is formed. Liquid soap is
halfway into soft clay. Modeling tools are brushed over the astronaut, acting as a
used to build clay around the astronaut, release agent from the plaster.
Making a Press Mold ensuring there are no undercuts.
Step 3 Step 4
Pottery plaster is mixed and poured over When the plaster has hardened (approx
the astronaut. imately 2 hours), the clay is pulled
away and the astronaut is pried out of the
plaster.
Step 5 Step 6
After the mold has dried, soft clay is Using a needle tool, excess clay is
pressed into it. Clay does not stick to trimmed away from the astronaut.
plaster and is easily pulled out.
38 Fall 2OOO
Pottery Making illustrated 39
The Basics of Selling Your Work
by Chris Campbell
Are your pots ready to sell? various places. While you might be
If youve been practicing your pot embarrassed at the novice skills you
tery for a few years, you probably possessed at the time, you should
have a selection of ware filling your never be ashamed of the quality. Your
shelves. The urge to sell some pots customers will seldom admit to buy
might be lurking in the back of your ing seconds and that pot will stand as
mind, but you dont know where or a permanent example of your skills.
how. Lets start by honestly assessing Put on your safety goggles, grab a
your work to date. hammer and get to work.
Step 1. Find the Good There is no permanent warning tag
to attach to your pottery. Its up to
Select only your very best pots and you to sell pots that are safe for their
examine them carefully to determine intended purpose. Are your handles
if your ware is ready for sale. Setting firmly attached? Do your functional
aside all aesthetic considerations of vessels hold water? Are all surfaces
design, what are the desirable techni that touch food well glazed? Are
cal aspects of saleable pots? there any visible cracks? Most defects
They should have a good glaze fit in pots show up when they are dry
with no crazing, crawling or pitting. ing. There is no amount of glazing or
They should be glazed with food- firing that is going to fix a dud, so
safe glazes that are fired to the rec recycle the clay.
ommended temperature. Step 3. Check Out the
Lips and bases should be smooth so Competition
they wont scratch, and they should
also be free of dirt-catching creases. Get out to craft shows, art fairs and
Use your work for its intended exhibitions in your area to measure
purpose. Put it in the oven, the your work against the local standards.
microwave, the freezer and the dish Where do you fit in? Your work will
washer, then test it again for crazing not sell in all venues, so try to get a
or discoloration. How easy was it to feel for where you might be comfort
use? Was it too heavy or too light? able trying your first sales.
Was it awkward to handle? In the next issue, Ill give some
Step 2. Delete the Awful pointers on how you can get started
with sales.
Now that you have your good pots Pots for sale must be safe to use,
together in one place, go back and free of defects and appeal to the buy
honestly take a look at the others. ing public.
How many of these were bad before
the bisque firing? You could have
recycled the clay then and tried
PHOTO: JEFF ZAMEK
40 Fall 2000
Pottery Making illustrated 41
42 Fall 2000
Pottery Making illustrated 43
By Don Adamaitis
METHOD ONE
44 Fall 2OOO
METHOD TWO
Step 1 Step 2
Cut a 11/4-inch piece of 2-inch, thin- Place a very thin layer of glue around the
walled plastic pipe. Place the pipe on a edge of the screen circle and carefully
piece of screen fabric and trace the out place it inside and against the ridge of
side with a felt-tipped marker. Cut along the 2-inch reducer.
the inside of the scribed circle of the
screen fabric.
Step 3 Step 4
Squeeze a thin layer of glue around the Take the VA inch length of 2-inch thin-
inside wall surface of the 2-inch end of walled plastic pipe and force it into the
the plastic pipe reducer, just above the reduced end of the pipe reducer.
screen area.
Step 5 Step 6
Tap the pipe home with a rubber mallet to The optional 2-inch pipe cap is used
make a solid fit. as a sieve holder and to catch any
drips after you filter your glaze into your
spray bottle.
46 Fall 2OOO
Duane Anderson Rick Dillingham
All That Glitters Acoma and
School of American Research Press, Laguna Pottery
Santa Fe, NM, 1999 School of American Research Press,
The subject of this book is one Santa Fe, NM, 1992
not extensively covered in other The pottery of the Acoma and
books about Pueblo pottery The Laguna Pueblos is polychrome, that
work shown is simple in form and is, white clay with black, red and
sparingly decorated, allowing the orange designs painted on. Its bur
beauty of the clay to speak for itself nished, though not to the high sheen
Micaceous pottery has long been of the red or black-on-black work of
used for utilitarian ware in the Southwest because of its dura other Pueblos, and nowadays most often fired in electric kilns
bility, but despite its sparkling beauty, it is relatively new in the rather than the traditional open bonfire. This book examines the
art market. Anyone who has experimented with the mica-con- history of the pottery and the evolution of the patterns used to
taining clay bodies now available commercially might be inter decorate these works, and describes what makes a pot authen
ested in seeing the work of potters experienced in handling tic or traditional. Dillingham briefly describes the making of
this difficult material. the work, including the preparation of the clay and slips, coil
This book focuses on a convocation of ten potters orga building, burnishing, decorating and firing. He then analyzes the
nized by the School of American Research (S AR) to discuss the basic forms and design elements, the distinction between cere
future of this type of pottery, and the subsequent First monial pots and pots made for the marketplace, and the differ
Micaceous Pottery Market that took place in 1995. ences between Acoma and Laguna pottery.
Biographical information is given for each featured artist, as The heart of the book explores the development of the forms
well as some information about their work styles and philoso and designs used by modern Indian potters. Interestingly, prior to
phy. The author is an anthropologist rather than an artist, so the the arrival of the Spanish, potters from these pueblos decorated
technical information is light. However, the author is acutely their work with a lead-based glaze that due to its runniness didnt
aware of the artistic value of the work and writes with sensitiv lend itself to finely painted patterns.This production ceased when
ity about the concerns of the individual artists. The chapters on the Spanish took control of the lead mines, and the clay slips,
the history and development of micaceous pottery are interest which supplanted glazes, allowed the development of the intricate
ing, and there are lots of photos of contemporary work, as well patterns we now associate with Pueblo pottery. Dillingham also
as an appendix picturing historical work in the SAR collection. traces the origins of the traditional design elements, relating some
of the imagery to Spanish embroidery and even Pennsylvania
Dutch pottery. This is not to denigrate the designs as borrowed,
but rather to point out that any rigid definition of pottery as tra
Susan ditional versus contemporary is essentially meaningless.
In conclusion, Dillingham examines the effects, both positive
Peterson and negative, of the collector market on both the pottery and
Pottery by the potters. He argues vigorously for examining each potters
American work on its own merits as works of art, rather than pigeonhol
Indian Women ing them as more or less traditional. He decries the collecting,
sometimes illicit, of ceremonial works, while appreciating the
Abbeville Press, enormous economic benefits of the market in Indian pottery. As
New York, 2000 long as work is not misrepresented to buyers, Dillingham sees
Peterson, author of in-depth room in the market for all types of pottery.
books about the lives and
work of Pueblo potters Maria Stephen Trimble
Martinez and Lucy M. Lewis, Talking with
covers the work of 28
American Indian women in this book. The book, companion the Clay
to an exhibition Peterson curated at the National Museum of School of American Research Press,
Women in the Arts, includes the work of six American Indian Santa Fe, NM, 1987
matriarchs of pottery, twelve of their descendants, and ten Trimble briefly explains the his
avant-garde Indian women potters, including three from tory and social organization of the
outside the Southwest. Pueblos, then covers the general
The first chapter, covering the history of Indian pottery, dis techniques of digging and process
cusses Navajo and West Coast Indian pottery, as well as the bet ing clay, coil building, sanding, bur
ter-known Pueblo pottery. The second chapter explains the mak nishing, decorating and firing. The
ing of Pueblo pottery, from clay preparation to the traditional bulk of the book is a detailed exam
outdoor bonfire. Primarily, however, the book consists of bio ination of the work of the various Pueblos, both the tradition
graphical information and a gallery of work by the 28 featured al styles and the innovations of contemporary potters.
artists, beginning with the six matriarchs. These are Nampayo of This book describes how the pottery of each Pueblo is influ
Hano, Maria Martinez, Lucy Martin Lewis, Margaret Tafoya, enced by both history and the materials available there, as well
Helen Cordero, and Blue Corn, whose works collectively spans as by important individual potters. It is filled with interesting
the gamut of Pueblo Indian pottery styles: polychrome, black-on- details about the materials, such as the tendency of the clay
black, burnished red, and storyteller figures. from Zia and Acoma to pit; and the use by pre-Columbian
The work included in this book is truly magnificent and Pecos potters of lead-based glaze made from ground galena
beautifully photographed, and the biographical and technical ore. The author interviewed sixty potters and the book tells us
information is interesting and informative. The avant-garde largely in their own words the story of the clay and the deco
work included forms a bridge between traditional Indian cul ration, the life, the joys and the frustrations of a Pueblo potter.
ture and contemporary Anglo culture and gives the reader a Though not a large book, this is the most comprehensive of
glimpse of the directions other Indian potters may begin the works discussed here, and offers a good overview to the
exploring as they seek to establish their own individual style. many different styles of Pueblo pottery.
Pottery Making illustrated 47
48 Fall 2000