I'm glad I happened onto your channel. I had seen this done with other pottery artist, but I couldn't remember who. But now I have your instructions and I hope I can do a good attemp to honor the tradition. Thanks for sharing. Subscribed.
This really is gorgeous. And a very clear and beautiful tutorial. Can’t wait to make one. Just one question…and an important one. How do you deal with sharp edges? It seems you are making a lot of them this way. Do you sand them down after the bisque fire? Would love hear from you. Thank you in advance! And now I am going to see what other videos you’ve made….😋🙏
To be honest, I really don't do a lot of sanding at all. As long as the edge isn't really sharp, I don't bother as the glaze will smooth over most of the roughness. Otherwise I'll give it a bit of a rub down with sandpaper. After glazing I do check over everything and sand any sharp bits down with a diamond pad, especially the bottoms so nothing scrathes any table it's placed on.
@@BlankEarthCeramics Ah thank you! That helps! I will try it out. Seems such a fun way to make a cup or anything really. Love watching you work. You make such beautiful pottery. Thanks for sharing!
I found you on Pinterest. I love the Kurinuki style but did not know what it was called! Thank you for sharing your process. I'm going to give it a try.
Thank you! I would say 70cm is quite challenging using this method - you would just start with enough clay to reach that height, you can use a long cylinder piece of wood to form the interior of the piece while the clay is soft and then hollow from there - it's not something I have done before though!
It best the do the first hollowing out when the clay is soft then leave until leather hard to do the carving on the outside. I've linked a blog post in the description with step by step instructions to go along with the video that you might fine helpful :)
Wonderful
I'm glad I happened onto your channel. I had seen this done with other pottery artist, but I couldn't remember who. But now I have your instructions and I hope I can do a good attemp to honor the tradition. Thanks for sharing. Subscribed.
Thank you! I'm so glad you found my videos helpful :) Let me know if you have any questions! x
Bravissima splendide creazioni
Thank you Adriano!
Great, thanx for sharing💝
No problem! Glad you enjoyed it :)
thanks
You solve my problem, thanks for your demonstration
No problem! Happy to help -glad you found it useful :) I'm intrigued now - what was the problem?
@@BlankEarthCeramics I have no idea how to do that, thanks your demonstration
@@cheungshuon Hehe! No problem :)
Great demonstration, thanks !
My pleasure and very happy you enjoyed the video! Thank you Ben x
love this! hope you make a video on your kurinuki teapot process as well
Christine Huang Thank you ! Glad you liked it and yes I have a teapot video in the works - stay tuned xx
Awesome❤
Ah thank you so much x
Très joli. Merci beaucoup pour le partage ! 🙂👍🏻🌼
That's pretty cool
Thank you!!
Great video Excellent 🎉🎉🎉
Thank you so much xxx
Thank you so much!
So helpful and so nice!
Thank you! So glad you enjoyed it x
I love watching your creative process! Such a beautiful creation and such dedication. Thanks for sharing! 😀
So glad you liked it! Thank you for watching xxx
Muchas grácias !!!
Thank you!
Now 829 likes including mine fresh one. Thanks for sharing!
Aw thank you so much!!!
This really is gorgeous. And a very clear and beautiful tutorial. Can’t wait to make one. Just one question…and an important one. How do you deal with sharp edges? It seems you are making a lot of them this way. Do you sand them down after the bisque fire? Would love hear from you. Thank you in advance! And now I am going to see what other videos you’ve made….😋🙏
To be honest, I really don't do a lot of sanding at all. As long as the edge isn't really sharp, I don't bother as the glaze will smooth over most of the roughness. Otherwise I'll give it a bit of a rub down with sandpaper. After glazing I do check over everything and sand any sharp bits down with a diamond pad, especially the bottoms so nothing scrathes any table it's placed on.
@@BlankEarthCeramics Ah thank you! That helps! I will try it out. Seems such a fun way to make a cup or anything really. Love watching you work. You make such beautiful pottery. Thanks for sharing!
I found you on Pinterest. I love the Kurinuki style but did not know what it was called! Thank you for sharing your process. I'm going to give it a try.
Hi Lisa - so glad you're going to try it out! Hope you find my tutorials useful and let me know if you have any questions xx
@@BlankEarthCeramics Your tutorials are great! I am going to share them with my ceramic's instructor.
@@lisacatlin7127 Thank you for sharing!! xxx
love your channel! what if I want to make something bigger lets say 70cm high. then how can I do it with the kurinuki method?
Thank you! I would say 70cm is quite challenging using this method - you would just start with enough clay to reach that height, you can use a long cylinder piece of wood to form the interior of the piece while the clay is soft and then hollow from there - it's not something I have done before though!
Sweet.
Thank you :)
are you doing this when the clay is leather hard or fresh? this is so lovely.
It best the do the first hollowing out when the clay is soft then leave until leather hard to do the carving on the outside. I've linked a blog post in the description with step by step instructions to go along with the video that you might fine helpful :)
@@BlankEarthCeramics thank you so much! I'm stoked to try it out.
@@karenharper13 Good luck with it!
nah I'm good