Friday, November 15, 2013

Hand Built Teapot

            In this project, I rolled more slabs than I ever have before. I learned how to hollow out solid pieces with the trimming tool. At one point I forgot to place a support inside the violin's body, and that was almost catastrophic, so I learned to improvise and figure out a way to place little support beams in. I have orchestra every day before ceramics, so the music in my head inspired me to create a teapot based on the instrument I play. The principle of design most shown my work would probably be Unity. I'm hoping that when I put the pieces together, they'll look like they belong there. 
            As you can see, I'm not done with this project yet. I still have to attach the pieces and make a bridge and some sort of support for the teapot to stand on it's side. I have not glazed my two complementing vases either, but right now the viola is my priority.



Friday, October 25, 2013

Glazing

For this piece, I used the green velvet underglaze, and scratched away my design. I then applied some of the purple underglaze, and mixed my own variation of light purple to accent the flower petals. After doing this on the lip of the vase, I decided to mix a lighter green underglaze to accent the leaves, too. Once it came out of the kiln, I applied Transparent to make it smooth and shiny.



Friday, September 20, 2013

Sgraffito


           Sgraffito is a super cool glazing and designing technique, where the glaze is applied before firing the pot, and the design is later scratched off the suface of the pot. I really enjoyed this process, and I'm looking forward to using this technique again. It was pretty nerve-racking in the beginning, but I think that'll happen to me every time I have to carve the design onto the clay. If I could do anything differently, it might be to practice with all the different tools before I actually start on the piece. All in all, I'm really happy about how it turned out. 





 This Sgraffito wall art thing is awesome! 

Friday, September 6, 2013

I missed you too, Mrs. Gleeson!


      Ah, Mrs. Gleeson! I did so many things this summer! Everything is a little hard to believe, but I went to both Disney world and traveled around Europe. My cousins and my uncle and aunt came up from Argentina for two weeks and we all went to Disney. Since they're so little, dragged my parents on all the roller coasters with me. The kids would get tired quickly, too, so in the end, I was the only one that wanted to stay in the parks for longer, while everyone else was ready to go back to the hotel and to the pool. Okay and then the coolest part;  I freaking TOURED EUROPE with a MUSIC GROUP. Jeez, I'm stil not quite sure if that was all real. We mades stops in Austria, Germany, Italy, Croatia, and Slovenia. Everything over there is so old... yet beautiful. There's little colorful houses with red shingled roofs, the mountains are green everywhere,  and their water good enough to drink. Croatia really surprised us; we spent three days at a beach, swimming in the crystal waters of the Mediterranean Sea. 
      In short, my summer was spectacular. As for books, I read a couple of John Green books I hadn't read before, but I can't think of anything really awesome. If you haven't read The Book Thief, you definitely should. 
      I just really wan to get on the wheel and see what happens! And I promised my mom a pitcher at some point this year. 



    • Title your blog post:  "I miss you too, Mrs. Gleeson!"
    • Write about one thing that happened to you over the summer (good, bad, exciting).
    • Any cool links I should know about?  Good books, movies, music?
    • Do you have any ideas for a project that we can do?

Friday, March 1, 2013

Third Quarter Post


   
   This month, I've been working on my candle holder. It is important to take your work off of the wooden boards when the project starts drying out. The wood board takes in the moisture and might make your piece bone dry if you wait too long. With this project, I focused on Unity and Balance and Texture. From this project, I learned that it is much easier to come into a project with design ideas ready, than to try to invent things on the spot. Some stencils are easier to use than others, and the roller designs are difficult to keep straight.
      The roller wasn't as hard to use as I thought. I also learned that it is important to cut the clay AFTER using a large design on it so that the sizes are all the same. It is better to quadruple check in the beginning than have to make up for it in the end. I would have probably liked if I could have finished this project faster, but that is more of a personal problem. It would also be nice to have a mini-lesson on accents and how to use the expensive glazes. 

Friday, February 1, 2013

February Post






Right now, I am working on the candle holder project. I just started last class, so all I have is one slab ready. Right now the biggest problem I'm having is based on design, but that's nothing new. I'll have to make a decision as to how I want the final product to look, but that's an internal struggle. There are so many choices! I am glad the slab machine is easy to use, and I've had no problems with it. 


My cups came out of the fire this week! The yellow one used the same glaze twice, the Goldenrod Shino, and held about 10 ounces. The brownish reddish cup used Chun Plum and Turkish Amber. It held 12 ounces of water. The dark blue cup was glazed with Dark Blue and True Celadon and held 11 ounces. Lastly, the green cup was glazed with True Celadon and Metallic Green, and it held 9 ounces.
I made a couple of extra cups, but only put handles on the ones above. I also finished up glazing my coil pot (finally) using Seaspray and True Celadon, and it is watertight.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

End of Semester!! Half Way Through!

       I have been working on making cups on the wheel for the past month or so. Here they are as bisque ware, glazed, but without the second firing. Among these there are also some extra credit projects I made in the beginning of November. Back then, I didn't know how to use the little bendy, blue tool used when throwing on the wheel to make the clay curve (AKA The Rib); and you can really see the difference with how thick the walls were before. 
       My glazed coil pot is in the kiln right now.