How to make pottery
By Mary White
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About this ebook
Mary White
Mary White is a farmer's daughter who lived and worked on the family farm in North Devon during the 1940s and 1950s. Although she moved away while training to become a teacher, and then had teaching jobs in Bristol and also Vancouver, she returned to Devon once more to continue her career and raise her family.
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How to make pottery - Mary White
Mary White
How to make pottery
Published by Good Press, 2022
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4066338090836
Table of Contents
To My Husband
PREFACE
LIST OF FIGURES
CHAPTER I THE CLAYS AND TOOLS
Tools
CHAPTER II HAND-MADE POTTERY
CHAPTER III WORKING ON THE WHEEL
Methods of Decoration
CHAPTER IV METHODS OF DECORATION
Dish for Candy with Ring Design
To Decorate a Small Bowl with Incised Design of Maple Seeds
CHAPTER V THE GLAZE AND HOW TO APPLY IT
To Glaze the Inside of a Piece of Pottery
The Outside Glaze and How to Apply It
Gray-Green Mat-Glaze
Pale-green Mat-Glaze
CHAPTER VI POTTERY FOR BEAUTY AND USE
Dark-Green Fruit-Bowl
Candlestick, Thumb Design
Bowl for a Lamp
Wall Jar for Plants or Flowers
Dutch Dish for Candy
Rose-Bowl with Moth Design
Flower Candlestick
CHAPTER VII HOW TO MAKE A PLASTER MOULD
A Bowl-shaped Mould of Plaster
Rose-Bowl Started in a Mould
CHAPTER VIII THE MAKING OF A TILE
CHAPTER IX THE KILN
THE OPEN-FIRE KILN
CHAPTER X BASKET-COVERED POTTERY
Indian Pottery Bowl Suspended with Raffia
Green Pottery Jar Inclosed and Suspended with Brown Rattan
Jar of Flemish Pottery Inclosed with Pale-Green Rattan
Green Pottery Bowl with Covering and Handles of Green Rattan
Three-Handled Bowl for Plants or Flowers
CHAPTER XI INDIAN POTTERY
CHAPTER XII MODERN AMERICAN POTTERY
To My Husband
Table of Contents
PREFACE
Table of Contents
An art like pottery-making, which is nearly as old as the human race, is naturally approached with some degree of reverence. One thinks of its old masters in various lands and ages—how they were content to spend a lifetime in the study and practice of it.
There is, however, another thought that comes to mind—that this art, like every other, had to have its beginning. Moreover, every potter, from the primitive man who first realised that clay which held water could be moulded into portable vessels for a like purpose, to the artist potter of to-day, has learned the first steps of the craft.
It was this thought that encouraged me to study the beginnings of pottery, and that leads me to offer this book to those who would also start clay-working, with no other qualification than the wish to learn how to make pottery.
LIST OF FIGURES
Table of Contents
The Clays and Tools
HOW TO MAKE POTTERY
CHAPTER I
THE CLAYS AND TOOLS
Table of Contents
Clay is what might be called the drift of the rocks of ages past. Most stone consists mainly of silica and alumina. In some bygone age, the potash and other alkalies, under the action of heat, fused these materials into rock. Potash is affected by the atmosphere, so it gradually left the rock, which decomposed, and the many particles, the fine refuse, after various changes became clay. Perfectly pure clay, or hydrated silicate of alumina, is found where some granites and other felspar-bearing rocks have decomposed. In the course of years, the clays, especially those on the surface, gathered impurities. Black clay, for example, which is found at the top of the bed, contains a large per cent. of carbon, formed by decayed leaves and twigs—like coal or peat. Strange to say, this burns whiter than any other pottery clay. It contains more potash than the other clays, and fires at a lower heat. The different proportions in which certain minerals are found in clays determine their plastic or non-plastic, fusible or refractory character. Potters have not been able to agree as to the reason for the plasticity of clay. Some believe that the silica gives it plasticity; others that it is due to the water inherent in the clay (which is called the water of combination), and give as their reason for the belief the fact that burned clay loses its plasticity, never to get it again. Yet water alone does not make every clay plastic: other ingredients are sometimes necessary. The early potter used the clay just as it came from the ground, but when he began to bake it in the fire he found that tempering materials were necessary. Sand was often added to make it easier to handle, and coarse, sharp pieces of shell or rock helped to prevent the clay from cracking, by lessening the shrinkage.
Later, as the art advanced, the value of certain materials in regulating the fusible and refractory qualities of the natural clay were recognised. There is in clays the play of melting and non-melting substances. Flint and alumina are hard, and uphold the clay in the fierce fire of the kiln; potash and soda make it soft and fusible. It is believed that the value of ground flint in pottery was not discovered until late in the seventeenth century. The story is that a certain potter travelling on horseback was delayed on account of an inflammation of his horse’s eyes. An ostler, wishing to help him out of his difficulty, took a flint from the road, and, after putting it in the fire until it was red-hot, threw it into cold water. It broke into pieces, pure white, which were easily powdered and applied to the animal’s eyes. Delighted as the potter was with the cure of his horse, the discovery of a white, infusible material for his pottery pleased him still more.
The combination of iron and lime in a clay forms a natural flux. For example: Fire-clay, which is quite refractory but which contains a small per cent. of iron, will, by the addition of a proportion of whiting (lime), become more fusible. Iron and lime in larger quantities are found in the clay which is made into red ware—flower-pots, red bricks, and other common articles. The large per cent. of iron gives it its red colour. It does not make as strong a ware as other clays. This red ware, which fires at the lowest heat, we will classify as Group I. To Group II. belongs the yellow or Rockingham ware. This fires at a light-orange heat, from 1,800 to 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. It is often finished with a dark-brown glaze. Mixing-bowls and other kitchen ware come under this group. Group III. contains the buff or cream ware, usually made of fire-clays. This hardens at an intense heat, from 2,200 to 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit. In this group is the fine pottery. Art pottery comes under this head. Group IV. is the buff or cream ware, fired at white heat and beyond. This is the stoneware. On account of the great heat at which it is fired, it is possible to use only certain colours in the glazes. They are limited to gray, brown, green and blue. Ox-blood has been obtained in this ware, but it is uncertain. Claret-and vinegar-jugs and butter-crocks come in this group. Group V. is the white or tableware, and Group VI. the translucent ware or porcelain, made of kaolin, the purest grade of clay. Felspar makes it meltable and translucent, and, to give it plasticity, a small proportion of ball or fire-clay is added.
Pottery clay differs from modelling clay in that it has more stiffening, so to speak. It is not so plastic, but, on the other hand, it will stand the heat of the kiln, which the other will not. The addition of whiting or felspar to modelling clay will give the needed stiffness. A pottery clay suitable for the work one can produce in one’s kiln must be so arranged as to harden at the degree of heat at which the kiln fires. Practically, we shall have little to do with any but the blue or ball clay and fire-clay. These are the best for pottery which is to be beautiful as well as useful. It is possible, of course, to use the flower-pot clay, and, perhaps, if one can easily obtain this clay, and is near enough to a pottery where the red ware is fired—so that one’s pieces can conveniently be sent there—it might be wiser to use it than to buy finer clays that come from a great distance, and then be obliged to send one’s pottery to a far-away kiln for firing.
The flower-pot ware is not strong, however, and fine glazes cannot be used upon it,