Monday, March 21, 2016

Vessel (in progress)

***IN PROGRESS***



I was trying to make the shape I had in the photo, but I haven't had any experience with the wheel, so I just used the first thing that looked good. My vessel will eventually hold makeup brushes, although it can pretty much contain anything. 

I think that I could've done better with the roses. I wish they were neater and cleaner, but I think I did my best at the time. 


Pit Fire Part 2


I used coiling for this pot and I hated it. I started out with a giant block and just made a bunch of long coils and stacked them together. It was really hard to get nice and smooth because there were a bunch of little worm clay pieces on top of each other. Burnishing made it look a lot better. 

This technique is different from regular firing because everything is put together in an actual fire. I didn't like pit firing because I don't like how inconsistent/mysterious the process is; I like knowing what my piece is going to look like. I put stuff on the inside of my piece and now it's black and chalky. Yucky.

Pit Fire Part 1

A pit fire is where you put a bunch of clay in a pit and light everything on fire. A foil saggar is what you wrap the clay in to give it a tiny environment for all of the little pieces to burn and create colors and patterns. 

These techniques create an interesting yet unpredictable range of colors on ceramics. The pieces still end up hard and dry, but the look is different because it was literally tossed in a fire. 

I tried to make the top middle vessel, but coil is hard and it didn't work.