Monthly Archives: May 2023

Deep Woods

A pair of vases suggesting leaves, reeds and moss, all catching the light around the base of an age-old tree; a play on darkness, shadows and light.

Hand built using a single slab of black stoneware clay, lightened with thinly-poured coatings of Frost porcelain. Yellow slip applied with a flick of the wrist, then sgrafitto<d to suggest waving leaves.

I submitted only one of these to the OGP 2023 Annual Exhibition, because the one on the right had a fault, and the submission deadline was up. A little sanding, a touch of slip, and into the kiln it went for a second cone 6 firing. All went well. From now on, this pair will stay together.

Height: 30 cm; Diameter at base: 8 cm.

Spring Glade – Set of three vases

Accepted into the Ottawa Guild of Potters Annual Exhibition 2023 May 5 – 7), juried by Angelo di Petta. Sold.

See the Exhibition Catalogue at: https://ottawaguildofpotters.ca/annual-juried-exhibition/

Streams of slips create a weathered, bark-like surface, while poured glaze reflects regrowth, through moss dappled green and grey in the sun.

Slips and glaze trailed and poured. Hand built using a single slab of stoneware clay. Fired to cone 6, in oxidation

Height: 27 – 30 cm, Width at base: 8.5 to 9 cm / Weight 664 – 785 g

At The Pond

Reeds waving in the breeze, and leaves floating on the water, all bathed in sunlight.

Wheel-thrown, using reclaim clay at Olaria Mealha, Lagos, Portugal. Only having time to bisque it there, I glazed it once back home in Ottawa. The streams of glaze create an attractive flashing just where they edge onto the bare clay. Did the gas kiln bisque firing in Lagos create that strong effect? Was it iron in the reclaim clay itself? All I know is that I haven’t, so far, been able to repeat it — and doubt whether I ever will. Oh well. I like it.

Wheel thrown. Stoneware; glaze fired to cone 6, in oxidation.

Height: 17 cm, Width: 10 cm