I really like to use small shallow bowls. They are so versatile, small salad, ice cream, yogurt and berries…
This weekend I decided to make some and carve them up with the ginkgo leaves. I see sprayed ash glaze in their future…
I really like to use small shallow bowls. They are so versatile, small salad, ice cream, yogurt and berries…
This weekend I decided to make some and carve them up with the ginkgo leaves. I see sprayed ash glaze in their future…
I had one mug that was very distorted after coming off the wheel. I decided to try creating a version of Jeff’s squared mug. This is definitely not my forte but I had fun trying!
We unloaded the kiln yesterday. I wanted to do a quick post and share this photo of one of the bowls sprayed with ash glaze. Jeff and I have lots of pots to pack and ship today. It’s seems to be our usual Monday routine.
Have a happy day!
P.S. Dad was doing a little better yesterday. Thanks to all for the well wishes. Check out yesterday’s post for the whole scoop.
While we all remember the tragic events of September 11, 2001, I would like to recognize a very happy event that happened on September 11, 1954. The day my parents were married.
They planned a small wedding and when the day arrived it was to be even smaller than planned. September 11, 1954 was the day hurricane Edna made landfall in Massachusetts. My parents were in Dover, NH which is near the coast in southern New Hampshire. Some of the guests weren’t not going to be able to travel to the wedding. Hurricane Carol had struck the area just 11 days before Edna. It was an active hurricane season in 1954! Despite the weather, my parents were married on schedule and left for their honeymoon in Niagara Falls.
Forty seven years later they decided to take an anniversary road trip to Burlington, VT. They left on the morning of September 11, popped some CD’s into the cars player, and off they went. When they arrived in Burlington they wanted to walk around town and visit the shops and galleries. They were surprised to find most of them closed and very few people out and about. They were perplexed to read a sign on one of the shop doors, “Due to the tragic events of the day, we have closed early.” Having not listened to the radio during the trip, they were clueless as to what had happened. They decided to check into their hotel. It was then, that the hotel clerk apprised them of the chaos that was happening in the United States.
Since 2001, I have never forgotten my parents anniversary.
Fast forward to 2016. If Mom were still with us, my parents would be celebrating 62 years today. Yesterday my Dad was not feeling well and my sister Anita took him to the emergency room. His heart rate was very low and they had a hard time regulating it. At the end of the day they decided to admit him. He may need a pacemaker. Before Anita left for the night they needed to clarify his advance directives with the hospital. Dad then said, “Maybe I’ll die on my anniversary.” It was heartbreaking to hear that he said that. After all he went through in the last two years, I hope that he won’t have to have another surgery. We will know more today.
It’s times like these that living 800 miles away sucks.
Jeff has had this adjustable banding wheel for years. It’s super handy for spraying glaze. The oval dish is glazed with tenmoku on the interior, so I only had to spray the exterior. This is an ash glaze that when sprayed gives the pots a toasty color without obliterating the carving that wood firing often does.
I spent the weekend making those things that are guaranteed sellers. Sponge holders and cheese stones. We were pretty much sold out of both after the League of NH Craftsmen’s Fair. After making a bunch of the carved sponge holders, boredom set in and I decided to stamps some using our stamps brought back from South Korea. I had never really used the “dotty” stamp before. I think I will like this little accent. The stamping goes quickly since all the dots are in a row and the stamp has a nice curve to it.
Yesterday was spent prepping pots and loading the kiln to fire a bisque. The weather was no different from any other day this summer… hot and muggy. Our kiln is in the sun, great for winter loading, lousy during the heat of summer.
There are several “out of control” California Jasmine bushes at that end of the house. They are in full bloom and their scent wafted over us as we worked. At first it was pleasant, then it almost became too much. We spent a day last fall cutting these back. It looks like we will be doing the same again in a few weeks. Everything in North Carolina grows like crazy.
Our outside work ended at 4:30 pm with a thunderstorm and a good dose of much needed rain. The rain brought cooler temperatures, but the humidity is still here. Today we will finish loading the kiln and fire a long slow bisque. Next week we will load her up again to glaze fire.