I love how you can easily watch this either to really learn about the process or just as a meditative experience just enjoying the visuals and that calm tone of voice. I like how the bottle turned out.
I know you're a professional but seeing you trim this on it's rim had my heart in my throat... I was mentally screaming for a chuck of some kind lol. Beautiful work as always Florian! I love getting to be a fly on the wall for your process! I could also see this vessel as a very lux way of serving wine at a dinner party. Imagine a deep red wine contrasting the jade green so beautifully!
So good for you, to get to spoil your beautiful friend! The vase is lovely, testament to the way you're always pushing the envelope to expand your skills Thank you-
Have you ever thought about putting a very slight curve on your pots? Not an outward curve that makes your type of pot look heavy, but a very subtle inward curve almost so much so that the glaze would fill in the difference I just think that it would leave a really nice gradient adding a new dimension to your pots!
I think this is possibly my favorite shape that I have seen you throw. Well, second favorite. There are some bowl shapes that are just mind-blowingly cool. I like how the tone of the glaze on your pieces works to make the angles feel a little softer, while at the same time highlighting them.
I think that bottle is a very pleasing shape! And I hope it's not rude for me to comment on something in the background, but I love that very very dark red finish on a couple of the other pots in your kiln! I hope we get introduced to it at some point.
Given how glazes will round flat angles and add a slight convex curve to your straight lines, have you thought about making pots with slight convex sides, and having the glaze transform them into straight sides?
you know sometimes i regret pursuing a BFA in graphic design when i work or see ceramics 😭 ive recently found myself having more fun in the past year i’ve been in ceramics 1 & 2
Thanks for the awesome video. Pulling the walls of my pots up is a piece I'm finding quite challenging as a beginner. When you are pulling the walls up (about 5:25) it seems you are compressing the wall from the outside with the sponge, pushing against the clay in the base of the pot, so you have a ledge of clay above the sponge. Then, are you simply supporting from the inside and lifting from the outside? Or are you pushing gently from the inside to amplify the bulge that you lift from the outside? Thanks again.
Idk exactly how he does it but I generally apply gentle pressure from both sides with my inside hand sitting a half inch or so below my outside hand and once I get a fingers length below the rim I take my hands off and pull through to the rim with my fingers for added stability. Hope that helps!
Bob Ross of pottery
I will gladly accept this title.
For real!
I love how you can easily watch this either to really learn about the process or just as a meditative experience just enjoying the visuals and that calm tone of voice.
I like how the bottle turned out.
You got us all holding our breath while trimming the bottom of the pot.
I know you're a professional but seeing you trim this on it's rim had my heart in my throat... I was mentally screaming for a chuck of some kind lol. Beautiful work as always Florian! I love getting to be a fly on the wall for your process!
I could also see this vessel as a very lux way of serving wine at a dinner party. Imagine a deep red wine contrasting the jade green so beautifully!
Ik that trimming has me shaking in my boots until I saw the lugs he was using 😂.
So good for you, to get to spoil your beautiful friend!
The vase is lovely, testament to the way you're always pushing the envelope to expand your skills
Thank you-
Have you ever thought about putting a very slight curve on your pots? Not an outward curve that makes your type of pot look heavy, but a very subtle inward curve almost so much so that the glaze would fill in the difference I just think that it would leave a really nice gradient adding a new dimension to your pots!
8:12 heat gun jumpscare 😅😅
i learn so much from you, even the drips are teaching moments 😊
nice sleek vase. it almost reminds me of the soda bottles with a marble in the neck. loved seeing your dog he deserves to be spoiled.
Dog approves of long and narrow as a design choice.
I think this shape is absolutely beautiful!
"It's not something you want to rush"
Immediate jarring jump to fast forward, hahaha
Beautiful work by the way
I think this is possibly my favorite shape that I have seen you throw.
Well, second favorite. There are some bowl shapes that are just mind-blowingly cool.
I like how the tone of the glaze on your pieces works to make the angles feel a little softer, while at the same time highlighting them.
The dream to have a Florian Gadsby piece one day. ❤
gorgeous
I would watch a shorts channel of your adorable dog :D he's so precious
Cute little dog and great pots
I like it too. Very elegant 👍
I LOVE the shape of this vase. (Yeah, it's definitely not a bottle in my opinion.) ;)
The drip!!!!😂 please get a funnel!! What an insanely beautiful vessel….
Or a picture with a teapot style spout😊
I want to hug him, “ the dog I mean
I think that bottle is a very pleasing shape!
And I hope it's not rude for me to comment on something in the background, but I love that very very dark red finish on a couple of the other pots in your kiln! I hope we get introduced to it at some point.
We already have! I think.
Cool as always
Beautiful
Superb as always 👏👏👏
Soooo good 👏
Given how glazes will round flat angles and add a slight convex curve to your straight lines, have you thought about making pots with slight convex sides, and having the glaze transform them into straight sides?
Did you read this on one of his shorts 😅
you know sometimes i regret pursuing a BFA in graphic design when i work or see ceramics 😭 ive recently found myself having more fun in the past year i’ve been in ceramics 1 & 2
I want to see you make a square bowl
✨✨✨✨
Thanks for the awesome video. Pulling the walls of my pots up is a piece I'm finding quite challenging as a beginner.
When you are pulling the walls up (about 5:25) it seems you are compressing the wall from the outside with the sponge, pushing against the clay in the base of the pot, so you have a ledge of clay above the sponge. Then, are you simply supporting from the inside and lifting from the outside? Or are you pushing gently from the inside to amplify the bulge that you lift from the outside?
Thanks again.
Idk exactly how he does it but I generally apply gentle pressure from both sides with my inside hand sitting a half inch or so below my outside hand and once I get a fingers length below the rim I take my hands off and pull through to the rim with my fingers for added stability. Hope that helps!