Pinch pottery Functional, modern handbuilding

Susan Halls

Book - 2014

"Utilizing techniques readers may have learned long ago in summer camp, like making pinch pots, Susan shows how easy it is to create a wealth of ceramic forms that are refined and incredibly modern looking. She begins with simple shapes anyone can make, like the classic pinch pot, and then moves on to pinching a sphere, a wide bowl, a trumpet shape, and finally a cylinder. From there Susan demonstrates how easy it is to cut, alter, and combine these shapes to make more complex forms."--

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Lark [2014]
Language
English
Main Author
Susan Halls (-)
Item Description
"Lark ceramics"--Cover.
Includes index.
Physical Description
127 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 28 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 126) and index.
ISBN
9781454704133
  • Pinching the basic forms
  • Essential shapes
  • Open-ended shapes
  • Adding elements to your form
  • Lips and edges
  • Feet and foot rings
  • Handles
  • Lids
  • Knobs
  • Featured artist: Mary E. Rogers
  • Pre-fired surface treatments
  • Adding and subtracting clay
  • Featured artist: Julie Whitmore
  • Featured artist: Vicki Grima
  • Color and glaze
  • Introducing color
  • Decorating and glazing techniques
  • The decorated surface
  • Patterns
  • Where to decorate?
  • Featured artist: Emily Schroeder Willis
  • Vase of many faces
  • Clays
  • Earthenware
  • Stoneware
  • Porcelain
  • Marbling colored
  • Coloring clay
  • Featured artist: Jenny Mendes
  • Kilns and glaze firings
  • Kiln types
  • Types of firings
  • The projects
  • Big bowl
  • Covered jar
  • Triplet herb planter
  • Shaker
  • Vase
  • Hearty mug
  • Country jug
  • Hors d'oeuvres tray
  • Cozy teapot.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Pottery in all its various shapes and colors is infinitely appealing, but the crafting can be daunting considering the materials and time needed. Potter and author Halls (Ceramic for Beginners: Animals & Figures, 2011) solves that dilemma through pinch pottery, when not wheels but hands (and occasional household implements) are used to create ceramic things of beauty. Traced to 3000 BCE, pinch pottery is accessible to all crafters, and the author makes it even more so through her instructional methods. First, she covers mastering essential shapes, such as spheres, wide bowls, spouts, and cylinders, followed by customizing elements lips, edges, feet, handles, lids, and knobs. Not only are there multiple forms to consider, she also explains the how-to's in simple language accompanied by close-up color photographs whether it's to achieve a sgraffito or inlaid effect or to attach a braided or coiled handle. Bereft of decorating ideas? Halls teaches the art of surface treatments color and glaze through words and pictures and provides actual art patterns (straight line, foliage, and square motifs) to emulate. Once she explains the basics, the nine designs appear, each with the same attention to detail as pottery's ABC's: a hearty mug-tankard shows off bold stripes while a cozy monochromatic teapot is elegant in its simple lines. Galleries, sidebars, and appendixes (glaze and slip recipes, glossary, reference material, author bio) fill in any conceivable information gaps. Pinch perfect.--Jacobs, Barbara Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Pinch pottery requires few supplies and is so basic that it's often how -schoolchildren first experiment with clay, but Halls, a potter and instructor whose work has been exhibited internationally, demonstrates how sophisticated objects can be created using basic techniques. The book gets right to the fun stuff-working with clay-and saves the descriptions of various clay types and ancillary tools for later. Halls presents basic material for beginner crafters, but she also includes more advanced information, especially regarding glazes and firing, for potters with some experience who want to take their craft further. Profiles of well-known practitioners who specialize in pinch pottery are interspersed throughout, and a series of small projects with full, illustrated instructions complete the package. -VERDICT Pinch pottery is simple and accessible, and Halls gives enough direction and background to get novice potters started with hand building. (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.