12 October 2009

puppets

Even before I started making pottery, I wanted to make puppets. I've tried my hand at one or two, but I hadn't done any in ceramic until this last kilnload.

I'm still figuring out mechanisms, but the dark red one (on my ring finger) has gotten a working mouth, and the purplish one on my middle finger has found a new home on top of one of Randy Tobias's walking sticks. All is well so far. . . .

(Apologies for the big picture crammed into the small space to the left. . . .)

10 October 2009

local pottery shards

I always look down when I walk, so I find some interesting things from time to time. I've been suprised at how many ceramic fragments I find, and I'm particularly suprised at a piece I found the other day. . . .


















It looks as though it's a fragment from the bottom of a locally-made jug, maybe from Edgefield (or made here in the upstate). The glaze looks like an alkaline glaze, and the piece has cutoff marks. The shape suggests a jug.

I'm by no means an expert on this sort of thing, so I might be off base, but it was a neat thing to find. (I just wish I remembered where I'd found the thing.)





































These are two chunks of pipe from the old Travelers Rest Elementary. The top one has a really pretty glaze -- it looks sort of like a salt glaze, though that seems unlikely. (But see above, where I note that I don't necessarily know what I'm talking about here.)
















And these were the oddest, just because of the shape -- the one on the lower right makes a pretty sharp corner. I found them near the old elementary school, as well. I seem to remember some old playground equipment that had tiles on it, but it was a ways off from where I found these pieces, and my memory may be a bit off.

In any case, these pieces will probably make their way into a new face jug sometime soon. Part of what I like about finding these fragments is that they allow me to incorporate some local history into my pieces.

09 October 2009

insects and pottery

I spotted a mosquito on an in-progress puppet head this morning:


I was going to say that it was the highest compliment I'd gotten, but then this happened a few minutes later:



So I suppose it was just an insect conicidence.

15 August 2009

a brief tour of the Patton Pottery workshop

Here are a few pictures of our workshop. Be sure to click on them, since Blogger cuts them off a bit. . . .

The picture below is the view just to the side of the front door of the workshop. Most interesting are one of Greg's disturbing assemblages (this one's a fountain) and the pottery chicken lamp (of unknown provenance).


Here's a view from the back door into the workshop. Greg was inspired by the Baltimore, MD tradition of screen painting:

Just across from the backdoor of the workshop is the kiln shed, and over the door to the kiln shed is this cheerful fellow:

More pictures are forthcoming, with any luck.

04 August 2009

coffee cup design

I bought these coffee mugs off a friend a few months ago:


If there's anything I don't need, it's more coffee cups. I couldn't resist these, though. The design is really slick -- the handle follows the curve exactly, and the cups are quite light. They're not the sort of thing I'd made (or could make without a mold), but they feel nice in my hand and they look good. The only disconcerting thing about them is the pinging they did when I first poured hot coffee into them. (My friend reported that they'd never been used, so maybe it's just the sensitivity of a glaze changing temperature quickly for the first time since firing.)

Every since I started making pottery, I notice and like all manner of ceramic items. . . I suppose that's how it goes for everybody.

24 April 2009

churning

I've been meaning to update for six weeks or so, because I bought a churn.

I made a trip to the Pickens jockey lot and found this piece. The price was right, so I picked it up:


I'm not in any way expert on this sort of thing, but my guess is that it's from Georgia. Looks like an Albany slip glaze, so probably 1890s to 1940s (and almost certainly the later end of that range).


There's a pretty large ding out of the rim, and there's some sloppy glazing at the top. There are quite a few minor odditites, but it's in good shape overall. The clay is very soft, almost like eathenware. Reminds me a bit of Lizella clay, since it doesn't seem to be really vitrified.


I bought it because I thought it was pretty cool. I don't think it's particularly collectible, but it's nice to have a piece of semi-local history around the workshop.

08 February 2009

ash glaze redux redux: tiles

As promised, here are the tiles from the test glaze batches we fired a week or two ago. These are just four tiles with two of the ash glazes and a new decorative feature:



The first glaze was supposed to be a tobacco spit. I like how it turned out on the Lizella clay -- almost any ash glaze looks good on Lizella. It's got some matte spots and some shiny glassy spots.

The second and third tiles are a new version of our standard ash glaze with a bit of copper added in. The color of the kitchen wall is similar to the runs, and is washing out the tiles a bit. They look good in person. But things looked very very very different when we mixed up a gallon of the stuff. Every kilnload is an adventure.

The final tile has a couple swatches of a metallic-style decoration.

More pictures are coming with the next page update.

01 February 2009

ash glaze redux: the magic of baby food jars

One of the dubious benefits having a baby nearby is the vast number of little glass jars that pile up. They look useful, but they're generally not. (I'd make one of those under-shelf old-man nail-and-screw toolboxes, but we've already got a spot for nails and screws and brads and staples and tacks.)

I finally realized that we could use those jars to mix up test glazes. I've got to measure more carefully than usual, since a gram one way or the other can make a huge difference in an ounce or two of glaze. (We cheerfully mix units of measurement.) But I can get a sense of what a glaze might look like before we mix up a couple of gallons.

We ran just a few experiments in our last firing. Several of those were ash glazes. As I said in an earlier post (in which the pictures are now broken), ash glazes can get out of hand easily.

Our new mixes went well, though, and gave us some idea of what we want to mix up. We should have some excellent new colors before too long.

Current pictures are forthcoming, with any luck.

27 January 2009

more cullet glass


He's a rock star.

Again, I don't know what this glass will do in the kiln, but I'll be interested to see. In the meantime, I might try and affix some of this stuff to some eyes after firing (though that seems like cheating).

26 January 2009

Face Jug of the Month Club

So, I had an interesting idea:

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=190282610007

The auction is for a subscription (the only one so far) to my Face Jug of the Month Club. Every month or so, I'll send along a new face jug to the winner. I'll include my usual mix of creepy things and even creepier things. . . .

It'll be fun to see how things turn out.

In the meantime, here are some in-progress jugs:



The crazy shiny eyes are cullet glass, the kind that makes reflective road stripes reflective. I found a pile of it on the way home a few months ago. . . I just wish it would shine that way after firing, but there's no hope.

07 January 2009

melting clay for eyes

I spent a pleasant hour or so watching Peter Lenzo work this morning. He is a meticulous glazer.

The devil jug in the post before this one, which I still like after a few months, and which is therefore looking down on me now as I type, has got a melted left eye. I know that it's obvious, but what surprised me is how well it turned out.

To come up with a melting clay, I ran a series of experiments. I started with a base of Highwater Clay's white earthenware and added frit (Ferro 3195) in varying percentages (by weight).

For the electric kiln, cone 6, 80% clay and 20% frit worked best.

So I guessed that for the wood kiln, cone 10, 90% clay and 10% frit would work well. It did, by and large -- it produced the eye in the devil jug below, as well as this guy's eye:



But the same mix also produced this unmelted result:



A mystery.

01 January 2009


This blog has been neglected, among the various vagaries of our lives. Fortunately, we don't have any readers.

We're going to put in another wood firing with Michel Bayne in a week or so, but I still haven't had time to make it out to the shop. Today is slipping away, and tomorrow is booked. Such is the way of things.

Included in this post are a couple of my favorite pieces from this year. Note the heavy Peter Lenzo influence. (He's told me I don't need to pay any licensing fees.)