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Thread: Pottery glazed on the wheel

  1. #1
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    Default Pottery glazed on the wheel



    This guy has pretty steady hands. The fun starts after the 3:00 mark, but it's all worth watching.

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    Default Re: Pottery glazed on the wheel

    That was awesome. I want to see the one he threw after it's been fired.

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    Default Re: Pottery glazed on the wheel

    I love the fact that with the single mistake he makes, he rolls with it to create something truly awesome.

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    Default Re: Pottery glazed on the wheel

    Production wares like a BOSS. Thanks for that.
    He applied a thin slip just before the glazes...man it's great to watch a master.

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    Default Re: Pottery glazed on the wheel

    Pottery was my favorite class in HS. My current retirement plan is to bicycle and fish all spring and summer, hunt ducks at fall/early winter and throw pots on the wheel the rest of the year.

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    Default Re: Pottery glazed on the wheel

    Interesting technique. Yup you need go timing for that. Also, throwing off the hump is not something I was ever great at. Practice is king.

    Critically speaking and slip work aside it's a bit of a dumpy form and I'm guessing it'll pour like shit. Unless he's gonna work the spout once it firms up. Be good for flowers anyway.

    Hugs.

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    Default Re: Pottery glazed on the wheel

    A friend of mine who does this for a living sent it:

    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v...537428&fref=nf

    As good as the guy in my first post is, there is a reason some people are called "master".

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    Default Re: Pottery glazed on the wheel

    That's awesome, I have pottery like that from Turkey, but they make it all over Eastern Europe. As Too Tall said it's actually a slip which has been heavily deflocculated to make it runny. My professor at Mass. Art made work inspired by English and early American slipware

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    Default Re: Pottery glazed on the wheel

    Quote Originally Posted by ericpmoss View Post
    A friend of mine who does this for a living sent it:

    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v...537428&fref=nf

    As good as the guy in my first post is, there is a reason some people are called "master".

    Sweet, Korean pottery is one of my favorites.



    Check out these old films.. at just after 7 minutes they show one of my most favorite potters, Shimaoka Tatsuzo as a young artist. I met him in Boston in 1997 after he was designated a living treasure by the government. His pots were mega mega big bucks $$$$$ Now they are affordable on the secondary market and I've collected a few.

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