Schön!!! 👍 Und die Schale hat gesungen ❤️ Das habe ich noch nie jemals so gehört, Danke. Ihre Arbeit zu sehen war wie ein Spaziergang durch die Natur 🌿 Danke für dieses Video ❤️
The first pottery attempts must have been made this way without the wheel. To me this approach is the purest and most honest ingadgement with clay and the final product. ❤❤❤
As a potter I can tell you the process with a wheel is very similar to this, he uses a circular motion in his pinching to form the bowl. Slab building would be very different though. I do agree there is something magical and pure about using circular motion to change the form of an inanimate lump of clay - with or without a motor. It’s a study of grace and physics to see the result you want when throwing a pot!
Wow a magistral work. I have a quick question is he fire the piece of art one or 2 times I mean do he fire a first time to transform it in a terracotta or nn?
How does the clay not shatter by cooling it that fast? Kiln firings are like.."let it cool for 12 hours after firing so it doesn't crack" and then you just quench it...
It's a special clay that is formulated to withstand the temperature shock. When I was in college, I saw the art students doing a raku fire. They took the hot pots out of the kiln with tongs and stuck them in a barrel of sawdust.
Schön!!! 👍
Und die Schale hat gesungen ❤️
Das habe ich noch nie jemals so gehört, Danke.
Ihre Arbeit zu sehen war wie ein Spaziergang durch die Natur 🌿
Danke für dieses Video ❤️
The first pottery attempts must have been made this way without the wheel. To me this approach is the purest and most honest ingadgement with clay and the final product. ❤❤❤
They are literally still using a wheel in the video. The first pottery would be much closer to what the Native Americans made with their pinch pots.
@@StuninRubor coil pots. My understanding is that the first wheels were used to smooth coil pots after they were built.
As a potter I can tell you the process with a wheel is very similar to this, he uses a circular motion in his pinching to form the bowl. Slab building would be very different though. I do agree there is something magical and pure about using circular motion to change the form of an inanimate lump of clay - with or without a motor. It’s a study of grace and physics to see the result you want when throwing a pot!
大変素晴らしいです✨続けてください。3個使用しています!とてもいいですね。
冷卻時的顏色變化及清翠聲音很特別!這是一個曲高和寡的UA-camr.
同意,這就是陶器的魅力,尤其是樂燒那種純手捏自由形式的茶碗,才能真正體會茶道的精髓👍
Very beautiful. The colours on the pot as it cools are magical.
Muy espectacular y una pieza muy bonita .Muchas Grácias
divine work
Wow a magistral work.
I have a quick question is he fire the piece of art one or 2 times
I mean do he fire a first time to transform it in a terracotta or nn?
引き出し黒😂いいですねぇ~
真是太美好了 !
Superb ceramic piece.
いいね〜Good流石😅👍
How does the clay not shatter by cooling it that fast? Kiln firings are like.."let it cool for 12 hours after firing so it doesn't crack" and then you just quench it...
It's a special clay that is formulated to withstand the temperature shock. When I was in college, I saw the art students doing a raku fire. They took the hot pots out of the kiln with tongs and stuck them in a barrel of sawdust.
Уважаемый Мастер сколько стоит эта прекрасная чаша?
Where can I buy antique Raku chawan?
and you are struggling to center your ball on the wheel watching tutorial after tutorial lol