At Last, The Cat Dishes!
1 week ago
I am a maker of functional clay work on Cape Cod. I work at The Barn Pottery in Pocasset with my life partner Kimberly Sheerin. Kim has worked in this studio more than 20 years. I joined her here four years ago, leaving my former Hatchville Pottery in Falmouth. We work together, making our own work, but occasionally collaborating. We're open at 359 Barlows Landing Road in Pocasset 12 months a year. Pleaser stop by.
8 comments:
I was amused to see signs of animal life within the depths of the kiln, and wondered if this was one of the hazards of potting out in the country! Not sure if wild pork would be still succulent after a cone 11 reduction firing, but if the firing were rapid enough, you never know!! The other thing I noticed was the improvised shelter... I live in an area where it rains only occasionally, but it almost always does this when I am firing a kiln!
I've been a little slow on blogging this summer too.Not a lot of new and different pots and if I start in on politics it doesn't seem to change John Boehner's mind one bit.Maybe I'll think of something nice to say soon.
Hi Hollis! Oh something will strike you soon and you will be chatting away.
I too looked at the tail end of the pig and thought something different this way comes.
I have always thought we could be roasting up real meat and bread instead of all these pots....
But keep working along and save us some sharing.
I'd love to see how that pig turns out....
I don't care how the pig turns out. I'd rather it just turn around.
Nobody's blogging or reading blogs. I'd like to think it's a summer thing, but Wall Street Journal says the blogs are dead, and I'm beginning to believe them.
I'll post the pig photo later today or tomorrow. The pig looks well-roasted. I picked up pots today at Castle Hill. A number of them will need re-firing, I think. I'll post a few pics in the next post.
I don't know about the blog-reading, John. I didn't see the WSJ article, but I would bet they were talking about political and other such blogs, and perhaps less so about pottery or creative blogs. There are a hell of a lot of good blogs out there, full of writing and stories and good images. I'd hate to think it all just goes unread.
Hope the atmosphere research is coming along...for me salt is good but I like soda better. Of course one firing in a kiln is hardly ever enough to get a good look at what might be possible.
I'm pretty sure there is at least one soda kiln in the Truro area:)
I've heard there's a soda kiln down-Cape somewhere, but I apparently don't know the potter. Someone help me on that one. It looks like Mr. Baker has figured out how to get lovely soda pots from his kiln.
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