Process


Wedging The transition from Art student to production
potter was difficult. Sitting at a potters wheel for several
hours a day, every day, had me dreaming about throwing. I would
wake up in the morning, with a sense of accomplishment for a
great days work, only to realize I had dreamed about making
pots that still needed made. 
Throwing Throwing is a very peculiar process
to learn. Just the first step of squeezing and centering a soft
lump of spinning clay, can be very difficult to do. Once you
manage to center the clay, you work with one hand inside, and
the other outside the pot.
As it spins in your hands, you pinch
the wall thinner and pull upwards. 
Stamping This pulling of the clay
is unlike any other activity. You must develop a new coordination
as you learn to throw.
Throwing is only one of several steps in our
process. They run in two stages: wet and dry. Each has their
own clock. The wet stage is: wedging, kneading clay balls for
the potter; throwing, shaping a spinning piece of clay on a
potters wheel; stamping, our one letter at a time decoration
process; and handling, the attaching, stretching, and
shaping of a handle.

Handling Each step
can only be done as the clay is ready. Too hard, or soft, and
the piece is no good. The dry stage is two firings: the 1,800°
F bisque and 2,400° F glaze. The bisque firing fuses the fragile
dry clay so it is no longer water soluble, but leaves it porous
enough to absorb a coating of glaze.

Coblating
Each bisqued piece is cobalted, the painting of the letters, logos,
and lines; and glazed, the application of raw
glaze. The final step, the glaze firing, turns the piece
into a virtual glass coated rock.
The bisque firing is simple.

Glazing If it is dry, the
pot survives; otherwise, it explodes when trapped moisture turns
into steam. The glaze firing is very precise. When you restrict
the air supply of the gas burners at high enough temperatures,
the fuel will fuse with the molecular oxygen in the clay and
glaze. Carbon changes a clear glaze on a tan pot, to a gray
glaze on a brown pot. Establishing a consistent atmosphere and
even temperature distribution is vital.

Kiln
Kiln design, and firing procedure are key to both firings.
If you do not follow the clays clock in either stage,
all efforts are lost.
This process has not varied since our first
load in 1976. If you sit an original piece next to a current
piece, there is a difference in quality, but not in the way
they were made.
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