Hi Simon! Thanks so much for the wonderful tour! And thanks for all your great demos! I also would love to see a demo of the 220 jugs! Perhaps Johnny now has a new name for these lovely pots!.....Suzon
I too would love to see the demonstration of the jugs at 220. Amazing..I have it sketched out for my pottery teacher but he will be in France for another month.
Beautiful and awe-inspiring! Those gorgeous jugs at about 2:30 remind me of hens sitting. (abstract, tallish hens)... If I learn how to make that jug, I'll be working on feathers next.... Thanks Simon!! Great show!
Doors on kilns like that one tend to be loose bricks that they set into the opening just before they fire. This allows for one or more peep hole bricks that they can pull out to check inside during a firing. :)
What is the jug at 2:22 ment for?
I saw one like it in a thrift store yesterday
DoNotSaySHE 2 months ago
nice video - don't ever show how those funny pots are made - let people figure it out themselves
LeCalligraphe 3 months ago
2:25 - very nice
demart 1 year ago
Hi Simon! Thanks so much for the wonderful tour! And thanks for all your great demos! I also would love to see a demo of the 220 jugs! Perhaps Johnny now has a new name for these lovely pots!.....Suzon
57su 2 years ago
I too would love to see the demonstration of the jugs at 220. Amazing..I have it sketched out for my pottery teacher but he will be in France for another month.
anniemac36 2 years ago
Simon, How does John get the white line on the gray pots on the table alongside the kiln? Are they sagger fired?
Warm regards from Debbie in Florida
claymoma 2 years ago
ahh, correction, it was in the 2:20 range, you know the ones, someone else wants to see you teach them too!
ThatLynnGirl 2 years ago 2
Beautiful and awe-inspiring! Those gorgeous jugs at about 2:30 remind me of hens sitting. (abstract, tallish hens)... If I learn how to make that jug, I'll be working on feathers next.... Thanks Simon!! Great show!
Lynn in Missouri
ThatLynnGirl 2 years ago
35 hours of feeding that monster!!! You need a lot of 'volunteers'.....
Ah, apple brandy. I think that's the same as Calvados in France, is it not? I've used mine up. :o(
pensandcalls 2 years ago
Doors on kilns like that one tend to be loose bricks that they set into the opening just before they fire. This allows for one or more peep hole bricks that they can pull out to check inside during a firing. :)
Sorka42 2 years ago