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Tag Archives: Art
The Day After
It was still cold today and the sun won’t make an appearance until tomorrow. I am counting on it to melt the ice and reveal green grass and pavement once more. The studio was chilly today no matter how much heat we pumped into it. I finally managed to get handles on mugs before calling it quits. The rest of the afternoon will be spent curled up with the cat and a book.
I might even put my pajamas back on.
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Snow and Ice!
The winter storm has descended upon us. The forecast for snow accumulation has been downgraded, but we are still expecting plenty of ice. If I had to choose between the two, I would choose snow.
Jeff and I are taking it slow today. The gallery is closed (obviously) and the only clay work I will get to will be some handles on mugs. It’s probably a good day to get my last quarter sales tax return completed. The deadline is looming.
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Be Prepared
Photo Credit: Joe Zentner |
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Hibernation
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Need Dentures?
Photo Credit: Jeff Brown |
Jeff has this awesome commission to sculpt a set of skull mugs with a matching pitcher. He has done skull commissions in the past, but it’s been a long time. I am absolutely amazed at how realistic the teeth are going to be!
Photo Credit: Jeff Brown |
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Cheap Eats
Jeff and I are pretty frugal. After a not so hot show season, coupled with big relocation expenses, we are being even more frugal. The fact that we both like to cook helps a lot. I look for marked down meats whenever I am shopping. This week I scored in-store made, bulk sausage at the local market for half price… I saw dirty rice in my future! I simmered a big pot of pinto beans, cooked cowboy style, to go along with the rice. It was spicy deliciousness served with a chunk of cornbread. I enjoyed mine in my favorite bowl by Seagrove potter, Tom Gray. Not the best color choice for serving this rather yellow meal, but absolutely the perfect shape. We ate dinner while streaming a television show, and this bowl feels so good cradled in your hands, filled with warm food.
I think this meal might have cost $8 to make, the biggest expense being the slab bacon that went into the beans, but we have enough leftovers to eat another meal and probably lunch too. It also felt like a treat. This isn’t a meal that is in our “regular” rotation, especially since it’s bacon and sausage on one plate! You gotta splurge once in awhile, and when you do… why not bacon?
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Throwing Money
That’s the what I think when I finish filling a ware board with sponge holders. They are easy to throw and make good kiln fillers. They can be placed around bowls and vessel sinks, as well as sit on the bag wall during the firing. I call it throwing money because every single one of them sells in no time at all. I am trying to get in the habit of throwing at least one board full a week. That way I won’t get bored throwing a whole bunch at a time… because yes, they do get boring.
Last year I nudged the price up from $15 to $20. When I was pricing them at $15 and they were selling like crazy, I felt like I was doing a lot of work for very little money. At $20, they are worth the effort.
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Not Piggy Banks
After a the holiday craziness, I have been given a very short reprieve from making pigs. Along with the dinnerware order I made some porcelain bowls and this shallow bowl/plate. It felt good to get back to carving those ginkgo leaves.
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Oops!
I do some of my best thinking (and worrying) between 4 am and 6 am. Yesterday was no different. I woke up and suddenly realized that the stoneware plates that I made for an order were supposed to have little slip trailed dots and I had forgotten them! Luckily they hadn’t been bisque fired. They were sitting on the ware rack, bone dry.
Typically I slip trail when the pots are leather hard. I learned a lot of slip trailing techniques from a decorator who workded at Salmon Falls Stoneware in Dover, NH. At Salmon Falls, all the decorating is done on bone dry clay, so I knew it wouldn’t be a problem to add the dots at this stage. One of the benefits of working on bone dry is that if you screw up, it’s easier to scrape off the slip, let it dry completely, then sand the area to remove any color that is left behind. I have had better luck working on leather hard pots. Occasionally, on the dry wares, the slip has broken off. It always seems to happen when your loading the bisque and it’s a pain to get out the slip trailer and start doing fixes. These little dots should be fine. If any fall off it’s a minor fix.
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