Spring is coming! I have been watching the crocus bloom in my front yard the last week and the daffodils just starting to come up. I was in the mood for flowers and decided to make some butterfly feeders. These will get mounted onto sticks after the firing that can go out in the garden. They're pretty, but also they gather just a bit of water for butterflies and bids.
One of my two large vases did not make it out of the bisque. There is a J crack that starts at the seam, goes down to the bottom, and then comes up on the other side. I noticed it when I was showing a few people at the chocolate party. They had asked - can't you just glaze fire it and hope it doesn't get bigger? My answer is a solid no. Let's say it does get bigger - and not just bigger but that side piece falls off in some way. Now you have this giant vase with one corner missing and then it falls into other pieces destroying them, falls onto the sidewall of the kiln causing a mess there, or BOTH! So yeah while it is a very pretty vase otherwise it is now garbage and I can make another one.
This vase is the bmix one, but the other one I did in laguna 60 has no cracks. My guess is that it originates on the seam and I didn't compress enough. Next one I make with bmix I'll make sure to compress better.
From a foot back you can't even see it! I didn't even notice when I first took it out of the bisque kiln.
This past week has been a whirlwind. On Saturday I had my first Chocolate Party since before the pandemic. The Chocolate Party is something I started in like 2002 and was an annual tradition. It is a whole party devoted to chocolate. It was great to be able to have everyone over. I managed to not take a single picture, but we had a great time. I was so wiped that Sunday I barely left the couch except to clean up the house.
This kiln happened in the whirlwind of preparing for the party. I love everything that came out of it.
Let me tell you about standing up all those mushrooms. There was one that I knew from glazing that didn't stand up. I was convinced it was one of the red ones. So I'm standing them up and I go to put this blue one up and it rolls off the shelf and down the side. Ugh. The entire kiln was full. There was nothing to do but start unloading. When I got to the last few shelves I remembered a pair of long thin tweezers that I have in the kitchen. I used them to pick up the mushroom from the very bottom of the kiln. Saved me some time and heavy lifting.
Loving these bowls on top. I love blue-green colors.
Is it ever too early to start making pumpkins? The little ones are just so cute, but also so finicky to make. I've learned to always have two leaves and two vines because one is very likely to break off before it gets glazed. Once they're glazed they are unlikely to break (unless I drop the box like I did at one of my shows).
I actually make these in a little bit of an assembly line. Roll out the clay and use the pumpkin cutter to cut - let those setup a bit so they aren't too floppy. Then I make all the stems. Then roll the clay thinner and cut out the leaves. Finally I make coils for the vines and wrap them around handles. Once I have all the pieces then it's time to make the pumpkins.
First I make body of the pumpkin. Next I attach the vines then the leaves and then top it off with the stem. Last I do the final touches of moving the leaves and the stems the way I want.
Have had a whole lot of magnets come out of the last kilns that needed magnets glued on. It doesn't take a whole lot of time if you lay them all out. First everything gets globs of glue (e6000) then everything gets a magnet. The lesson I learned was to not try to have multiple magnets in my hand because they really want to join together and will jump around if I'm not careful.
I also had two wine gnomes come out who got their corks. There are another handful coming out of the next kiln.