Drying Rack

Bisque-Fired Pottery Drying

The dining table is covered with drying bisqueware pottery that’s been treated with red iron oxide stain prior to glazing.

A drying rack (the dining table) is covered with bisqueware pieces that have been previously thrown, church-keyed, bisque-fired, and treated with red iron oxide stain to accentuate the patterns.  Next step is masking with liquid latex, glazing, and finally glaze firing.

Resuming Raku

It’s been about 2 years since the last raku session so this was overdue. Perfect weather, recent retirement, and renewed enthusiasm conspired to make a firing all but inevitable. Results were encouraging and, as always, new things were learned about this tricky and unpredictable technique. Thank you kiln gods!

Inaugural Glaze Firing

We completed our first glaze firing since a little over two years ago and it’s also the first glaze firing in our Newfield home. New church-key patterns were tried out and old glazes stirred up. Results were encouraging on some fronts and there are opportunities, as always, for tweaking the art and the process.

My First Blog Post

My newly-renovated Web site includes this blog, for which this is its inaugural post.  It may also be the last post, in which case the title could just as well be “My Last Blog Post” or “My Only Blog Post”.  You see, I do pottery, not blogging.  I haven’t the faintest whisper of interest in blogging. I don’t see the point, I don’t know how to do it, and I don’t care to learn–life is too interesting to spend any significant time writing and managing a blog, of all things.

Given my deeply profound indifference to blogging, you may wonder why I bothered putting up this post at all.  The answer is simple:  I didn’t.  My ghost-writing husband did it.