

![]() Click to enter gallery | Garden Lamps Gallery The beautiful garden lamps enhance you landscape and bring rave reviews from all who see them. Super easy installation with low 12v energy cost. |
![]() Click to enter gallery | Incised Bowls Gallery "Lotus" This lovely bowl is reminiscent of the welcoming open petals of the ancient lotus flower. |
||
![]() Click to enter gallery | Candle Lanterns Gallery These exquisite candle lanterns cast light images and add a cozy atmosphere to your living area. |
![]() Click to enter gallery | "Small Bowls" incised "I create new patterns often. I look at nature and draft an idea that suggests the organic form that pleases me. Here are 12. |
||
![]() Click to enter gallery | Potpourri Jars Gallery A outstanding choice not only for the eyes but for the bouquet that arises from them. |
||||
![]() Click to enter gallery | Specialty Bowls A outstanding choice of incised bowls are unique in design and size. |
||||
Stoneware is a high fire (2380 degrees F) clay that has many properties including how it handles in the making of the piece and how it effects the glazes. I choose white stoneware for my functional pieces for it's fluid nature and neutral backdrop for my glazes. It is very sturdy and can handle everyday use. It is dishwasher and microwave safe and can tolerate oven temperatures provided that it isn't shocked (it needs to warm up slowly by being put in a cold oven.) These qualities are great. I do however recommend that any cut work you buy, because of the delicate piercing, be hand washed.
All hand made pottery is subject to slight changes in size and shape and from batch to batch in the glazes. I hand throw on a potter's wheel most of my work and like to leave marks of my hand in the clay, such as finger rings in the bottom of bowls. My glazes are formulated and made by me. I personally measure the ingredients on a gram scale. The batch of raw material, the amount of water to chemicals, the barometric pressure, the placement in the kiln, the temperature and type of the firing, the manor a piece is glazed, all influence the end color and depth of the glaze.
I try to keep these as consistent as possible. I try not to have the solid color indicative of commercial products. I fire my stoneware in an electric kiln which provides an oxygen atmosphere. This type of firing is convenient but the glazes can have a flat look. To avoid this, I glaze most every piece with two glazes. In some cases I dip the rim in a third to give a dark blue variation. You can see this in "Lotus." By using multiple glazes I can achieve great variation and depth in the color. Variety is something I hope to attain in a hand made piece of pottery.
Raku is a form of firing pottery. Work is made with the firing method in mind. Pieces are bisqued and glazed with various raku glazes and fired to 1750 degrees F. When this temperature is reached and the glazes are shiny the door of the kiln is removed and the pieces are taken out one at a time to be smoked or flamed depending on the desired effect. I do both types.
Contact
Webmaster
Copyright © 2002 by JIPottery
Privacy
Statement / Fair Act Statement