Here's a slab-built vase that I made for demonstration purposes at school. I think the bow-tie is my favorite part.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Monday, November 5, 2012
Kinetic Toy!
I rolled a large slab and cut the parts for the boat and water using the patterns as a guide. Looks complicated.
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| Next step: start the assembly of the leather-hard slabs... |
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| The boat's almost ready for the water that's "leaked in". |
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| The hole is cut and the clay scored in preparation for attaching the boat. |
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| Detail is added to the waves using soft clay and a modeling tool. |
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| Pinch pots are the basis for the fisherman's head and torso...who said pinch pots are too basic? |
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| Detail is added to the leather-hard pinched forms using small modeling tools. |
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| The torso is used as a template for cutting a hole in the water for the mechanicals that will make the head turn. |
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| A sharp X-acto knife makes a clean cut. |
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| The boat is nearly complete and will be dried out and bisque-fired. |
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| The parts for the arms and the fish are pinched/formed by hand. |
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| After bisque-firing, all clay parts are primed with a water-based primer, then painted with acrylic paints and detailed with fine-tip permanent markers, color pencils, etc. |
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| The head gets some detail applied. |
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