Monthly Archives: September 2019

Trout Lake mugs

Why not have a decal made of a watercolour I painted during a typically Canadian weekend at a cottage on the lake? Sure, no problem, says Art Petch (Ottawa).”Let’s see how close I can get to the colours in your original.” I left it to him to decide how to convert the RGB image file to the CMYK colour profile suitable for the ceramic pigments in the printing.

On the wheel, I had thrown a series of standard, large mugs of the same height and diameter. I needed the sides to be perpendicular, to allow for a smooth application of the decal. Applying the decal should be straightforward, only requiring careful smoothing of the surface, to remove any air bubbles or water trapped beneath the film.

But mistakes do happen; they may, of course, lead to intriguing results. Once, in a moment of inattention, I applied the decal the wrong way round. The decal itself should lie on the glazed surface, with the lamination on top. Switching this around gets you an unexpected, crackled effect.

Stoneware, hand thrown; decals.

Fired to cone 6, in oxidation.

Six Miniature plates

Recently I have been using classic, hand-thrown pieces as a canvas for abstract patterns, in sets. Each piece, sufficient in itself, should contribute to a pleasing view of the whole. Each plate is small, functional, that nestles lightly in the hand. I make them to be used in everyday life: on a dining room table for condiments, or on a dresser, to hold something special. For me, the magic comes in the glazing; it’s the glazes that create something unexpected, evocative, and that catch the eye.

The initial glaze I applied by dipping the entire piece, except the foot. By the next day, with that layer dry, I applied the design by squirting a variety of thicknesses of the second orange-red glaze, which, after firing, seems to ripple over the iron-rich black glaze underneath. The very fine lines of white, shifting and moving in the melt, evoke for me white breakers at night, falling on a dark, heaving sea.

Dia: 8 cm

Porcelaneous stoneware (Frost), overlaid glazes; fired in oxidation to Cone 6