 Phuolang Pottery Village, located 60 kilometers from Hanoi, and Phuolang Ceramic Village in Kuevo District, Bac Min Province, is one of the last remaining villages in northern Vietnam that have been producing ceramics since the 13th century. Located in the Khao River, the ceramic village of Phuolang retains the simple beauty and peaceful atmosphere of yesterday here, with its narrow zigzag lanes, red brick walls, and then changing scenes of rural Vietnam, jars, vases lying the roads of the village because almost every family in the village makes pottery. So here we are in the workshop, they make the pottery pictures and you see Chiang Gom is a Vietnamese, Chiang picture and Gom is a pottery, and the name of the owner and they have a very nice slogan for that village, it means preserve the soul of the soil, that is slogan of the village. According to a book titled King Bac Habac, the founder of the pottery craft in Phuolang was Mr. Ly Phong Tu. In the Li Dynasty, Mr. Tu was sent as an envoy to China, where he learned the pottery craft. Back in Vietnam, he passed on his knowledge to the people of Red River Delta. It was at the beginning of the Trang Dynasty, in the 13th century, that pottery first appeared in Phuolang. Every single house in that village, they are the small workshop, they work at the small workshop with some workers, they make the stuff from the clay, they make it become the pottery. So in that village, every house they are going to make the pottery products for daily use, like the jar, the bottle, or the bowl for you to eat every day. Beside of the daily use products, they are going to make some things to build the buildings, like the roof and the ceilings and everything. If you go to the temple in Phuolang, Vietnam, you see all the roof with a very nice curve, they all make it with the pottery or ceramics. So now here, you can see the pottery painting. They make it all with the clay and the pottery. The artist, they are going to make the whole painting like that, with the whole clay. And then they are going to split it. You can see some crackles like that with their knife. And then they put it on the keel. They are going to put it on the keel and burn it for some hour, like another ceramic stuff. And then after that, they have a whole painting like that. It's so beautiful. It's amazing.