Friday, November 30, 2007

Hana's ninth class

This was our last class in the classroom. Our last class will be at Gary's house, doing a large pit firing. So, today was the last day to glaze and prepare our pit fire pieces.

First, I wandered around looking for all my bisque-fired pieces. I will take a moment to describe a scene from "Ozma of Oz" by L. Frank Baum. As summarized by Wikipedia:

The expedition journeys to the underground kingdom of the Nomes, where the Nome King reveals that he's turned the royal family into ornaments around his palace. The Oz people can guess which ornaments they are (he doesn't reveal that they are royal purple ones), but if they fail, they will also become ornaments. [When they are ready to guess, they touch the ornament and say "Oz".] Ozma, the twenty-seven soldiers of the Royal Army of Oz, the Tin Woodman, the Scarecrow, and Tik-Tok all suffer this fate (Dorothy escapes it only by touching a purple ornament in one of her guesses).

Every time I'm confronted by a wall of bisque-fired pots, I think of this scene in the book. I scan the shelves, and hesitantly pick up one piece to check the signature on the bottom. I sometimes even think the word "Oz" to myself. It's silly.

Anyway, I found the four pieces I had bisque fired a long time ago, and then set out to find all the ones I'd finished in the eighth class. I only found 5. How many did I make? I feel like I didn't find them all, but I didn't remember what I had finished.

Then I went into the glazing room to do my first glazing of the quarter. I really don't like glazing. I don't feel very creative in that step, and it's so easy to mess a piece up. If you're unfamiliar with the studio's glazes, you don't know how thick to do it, how much it will run, etc. Oh well! I just dove in and dipped my pieces in various buckets. We'll see how they come out. I did two of my spherical pots in black, a couple in copper green, a couple in "maria's blue" (seems like a nice blue-green shiny one), a piece in the mottled brown with green flecks, and one in a dark blue. I did layering on two pieces. The wonky piece (the attempted round piece that squooshed on the wheel) has a base of I think blue and then maybe green around the rim and running down one side so that it pools in the wonkiness. I did another round piece in brown with black around the rim and running down the sides in three kind-of stripes.

Unfortunately, the first piece I tried to glaze, one of my first mugs, really came out poorly. The glaze was really lumpy and not very deep in the bucket, so it really stuck to the pot and looked awful. I decided to scrape a bunch of the glaze off (particularly the clumps, which could run badly) and then do a coating glaze in clear. Well, after that it never dried much, and then I made the bad mistake of setting it upside down to clean the bottom, and all the glaze came off the rim. Between that and the finger smudges and the likelihood of it not drying in time to try again, and it being the last class, I ended up just throwing the cup away in frustration.

Finally, I prepared my two pieces for the pit fire. They came out of the bisque looking really nice, though not nearly as shiny as some other people's. We were supposed to coat them sith stuff, and wrap them up in flammables, but I wasn't very energetic at this point. I put a bunch of powdery random things inside one (tea grounds, some spices) and then wrapped copper wire around the outside. The other I brushed a glue/water slip over it and sprinkled some herbs all over the outside. I then wrapped it with corn husk and a small branch of pine needles, and wrapped the whole thing in newspaper to keep it together. Now I just have to remember to take them to next week's pit fire at Gary's.

I got home feeling worn out and kind of frustrated. I love throwing on the wheel so much, but some of the other steps just feel like work.

4 comments:

jacqueline said...

I love looking at the bisque shelves full of the great things people have been making... so fragile.

"Oz," I like that.

Also, even tho preparing your spherical pots for pit firing was tedious, it SOUNDS amazing. Corn husks as pine needles and tea and spices and copper wire!?! how amazing!

Too bad about the abandoned cup. You facility didn't have a hair dryer?

hana said...

I think we do have a hair dryer, but at that point I gave up. I looked at it for a minute and decided the construction wasn't really worth all the effort anyway. It was the weakest of the three cups I'd made.

jacqueline said...

sad.

hana said...

Yeah. Next time I'll try not to save up all my glazing for the last class.

So I just reviewed my last posting, and I think I did find all my pieces. That makes me feel better.

Also, my shoulder was sore for a week after doing the terra sig polishing. I'm glad we're doing it though, it's certainly an adventure!