Sorry to tell you, but Ron Carlos, one of the potters featured here, passed away yesterday, May 3, 2023. Watch the documentary made about Ron at this link ruclips.net/video/jsq6zsfMxCs/видео.html
That is really too bad. Just based on videos and information I've seen about Ron Carlos, he seemed like an amazing individual, I really respect that his passion seemed focused on ensuring 2 that his family's heritage and traditions were not lost, as I feel is happening with an increasing rate.
It turns out that the clay on my property is excellent building material and I'm making a bowl a day until I have more pookies. I'm so glad I came out to your workshop.
I've not created a single bowl or pot in my life, but stumbling across your videos has inspired me to get more creative and go out and create. Thanks for the positive energy.
Can I just say thank you!! I’m a collector of hobbies and recently found a big spot of clay in our back yard, we processed a few pounds and finally started making things with it today but I wasn’t sure how to fire it without a kiln! So thank you SO much! ❤
youre so informative and your passion for the craft really shines and makes you want to run out and start trying to make all kinds of pottery. thank you for sharing
Drilling piers on a construction site in Utah. Just got about 5 gallons of some extremely nice raw clay from around 20 feet down. Going to give it a try this weekend.
Beginning to think the term primitive pottery is a misnomer considering the excellence in design and form and function of these potteries. I'm actually astounded I hadn't really thought about Southwest pottery much other than the Anna pottery my dad had on a shelf. Thank you for your education.
Some of those pieces you showed of other potter's works and pointed out they were produced with primative tools blew my mind. And some of them were just out right breath taking. A very inspiring collection of information. Thanks Andy.
I’m so glad I stumbled upon your channel! I can start turning my neigh sayers to your channel and videos to help explain and help inspire others to understand and take up the primitive lifestyle.
Once again Andy , Yuve nailed it ! And what you said about resources for making primitive pottery were very limited back in the day ( 60’s/ 70’s) Thank you so much again for sharing & clarifying ancient pottery ways !
You are incredible!! I only came across your videos yesterday but you inspired me to go out into the sunshine and gather my own wild clay!! Now I have a jar of clay and a jar of sand waiting for me to process them! Without your guidance I'd have never had the get up and go in me to do this myself so THANK YOU!!!
I grew up in Central New York, we had Syracuse China that provided several retailers with Local Dinnerware and Now They are Gone! There are some remnants in pallets in Bisque form that still exist there and if you retrieve them there is a local Ceramic Shop, Clayscapes that will fire them for you!
Well, kind of. The ancient equivalent is Ramos Black ceramics.nmarchaeology.org/typology/type?p=480 which is not decorated or as highly polished and the modern use of graphite makes those shine like metal.
you always produce such quality content, thanks! and thanks for providing other artists to look at. I was just thinking this morning that I need to build my first pot, then your video popped up. I spent a few weeks gathering clay from the Pala Chief mine in CA, then making a plaster drying basin, then wet processing it and adding temper from the local creek and I finally have a few bags of clay ready to use ( I think). Funny how the universe works like that.
Its interesting watching this from scotland and seeing the ground you get the clay from. Our ground goes from wet to waterlogged to marsh and swamp. Dry ground is very unusual here but in the summer we might be lucky and get a few weeks of sun. There is a field near where i live that i know clay exists. Its a grey colour. Need to dig it out of wet mud though
Thank you for beginner video! Hope to try my hand at it. I loved working with clay in high school, {not bragging} had A's on my sculptures & coiled pots. Not so good on the wheel I needed more practice to get the 'feel'. All these years thought pottery was out of my reach because I would need a kiln. Thanks to your channel so glad to find out pottery can be an option for me again! I have my hands in so many various creative projects, and gardening, cooking etc. etc. the most difficult thing is finding enough time to try/do everything I have an interest in, the list is long!
Hello, Andy, I hope you will show even more techniques in the future. I would love to learn more advanced stuff since there is not much information about pottery and clay. I want to suggest that you should speak a bit louder since the sound isn't the best. Thank you for the effort and huge resource of the information. Seriously you are sharing a lot of valuable information with this world.
I adjust the sound on my videos when I am editing them to the recommended level. For more advanced lessons you should check out the Ancient Potters Club where we make pottery together over Zoom every Wednesday night.
Serious question have you ever used dried and crushed powdered eggshells in or on your pots? Just thinking eggshell is made of minerals. Kinda curious how it would work out if used on top of a slip coat.
Could be possibly used as paint? Might be interesting if fired but im not sure what will happen to the egg shells once fired. Might be like limestone where once it gets wet it expands and starts to crack
No, I'm not being conceited when I say, I think my RUclips channel is about the most complete compendium of primitive pottery information in existence. There is an old book from the 70s amzn.to/3BgGavy but it's pretty general. And Clint Swink's book amzn.to/3B56poU which is specifically about Mesa Verde pottery. These are referral links so I make a small commission from purchases.
Great video, Sir! A cut and dry method is what a lot of people are looking for, and it is helpful when getting started for sure, and also if someone hasn't got it quite right yet after many tries... This will get people on track for sure! As far as primitive goes, I assumed that primitive meant Crow Magnon! Anything made like Crow Magnon people is primitive.... perhaps it is a spectrum, being pottery wheel and store bought clay, fired with an electric kiln, being least primitive and using natural clay, building with hands only, and firing with fire... being the most primitive... Good stuff, since we are all primates, maybe everything we do is a level of primitive! LOL! 5 star video here, sir! we all agree!
As always a great and useful video. I've been trying now for sometime to work with clay from my land only. I believe there's a good-enough clay content in my soil that I can either water levigate it or dry levigate it to make clay. It passes the ring test that I learned from you and it does fire and stay solid. But even after firing it still has a slightly brittle nature to it. I'm guessing this is too much sand or temper in my mix? I have no experience other than this clay to compare it to. I am a complete beginner. But have managed to make a few cups bowls game pieces in a game board for my children. Even a small oya pot (not Sure on spelling of that -its a pot for watering in my garden.) And I've been pouring letting water soaked through it every day for almost a month now and it has not disintegrated yet. So I think I'm getting it and I've got good clay but I'm not really sure.
I would guess too much temper. But some clays are just not really good for pottery, and it could just be an inadequate clay. Maybe try levigating it real good, then adding only 20% temper and firing as usual. If it is still brittle but fully fired I would just say it is a shortcoming of the clay.
@@AncientPottery your so amazing. Thank you so much for taking the time to answer my question. It really helps to have someone with exsperance just to check with and bounce ideas off of.
They are just some baskets I have around, I am not a basket expert so can't say much about them. One is Seri, another is Tohono O'odham and another is some cheap junk from Pakistan or something.
650-700f is hotter than you get on your oven? That is the temperature range for electric self cleaning ovens when you hit the clean button. Ive used it to clean cast iron pans as it burns off everything including the seasoning and returns it to bare metal.
Out of curiosity, what do you specifically mean/define when using the term prehistoric? Like literally as 'pre-history' or recorded data, or the more vague term we're taught as children to be anything from pioneer to dinosaur history? I hear it mentioned with pottery to be more specific, but haven't really heard anyone nail it down exactly. Add: As one (me in this case) gets into learning old techniques, I've mentioned this to a few colleagues of mine about primitive versus different terminology, because just the word 'primitive' is immediately attached to a certain stigma of lower evolution or intelligence. In the end I label it broadly as 'analog' and things are more readily understood by a certain generation. For me, analog kind of starts up in the 1900s, which by any measure of industry or revolutions today could be called primitive, i.e. the building blocks of a modern process. It's all intonations of the english language and part of the way people are taught/learn it--which if the education I received versus what my children are getting is any measure--becoming more and more deficient by the year.
Prehistoric can mean different time periods depending on where in the world you are. It means before written history. So in Europe that could be thousands of years ago, but here in the American Southwest it means before 1540 when the Spanish arrived. Some (easily offended) people now use the term prehispanic which is thoroughly stupid if you ask me.
@@AncientPottery Thank you for the clarification! I've yet to dig into some real meaty pottery books as the chemistry is the thing that interests me foremost, as well as the artistic creation itself. I hear you on reversions of the 'PC' people though. I've recently been informed by my daughter that this is called 'Being Online'; to be used in a derogatory nature. Ugh, kids...
I have watched your videos for days here at home trying to learn as much as possible before I start. I especially like the history you have given. Now I will add a minor suggestion, 20 percent is not 4 to 1. Twenty percent is 5 to 1, 4 to one is 25 percent. Okie dokie, now back to the important stuff, watching the videos, tans a bunch for putting all this info out there!! I'm is the same desert about 65 miles south of Alpine, TX, off-grid for the last 5 years. Retrieved some hardened mud from one of my driveways mudholes yesterday and about to add water to it to break up/dissolve the clumps and see how it looks. May use a hammer to bust it up until I get a grinder.
I love that country around Alpine, it looks a lot like southeast Arizona. Now for your lesson. A ratio is not like a fraction, with a fraction the bottom number represents the total number of parts. With a ratio, no number indicates the total, only by adding the two numbers will you find the total. So 1/5 is 20% but a ration of 1:4 is also 20% because it means 1 part of the first element and 4 parts of the second with a total number of parts of 5. So to recap, 20% = 1/5 = 1:4
Hi, this is a question I've wanted to ask- i live in the East of England and i live an area where we have lime-rich clay soil. Is this useable? Should i add temper and do a kiln test? My idea was to dry out the wet clay and filter it but is there a more convenient way? I can dig a little and easily find wet clay in my garden, so if its useable that'd be great! I know this is a long ramble but it's hard to find info that's relevant to where I live! I'm very interested in the neolithic pottery of Britain, I love seeing the local finds!
@@AncientPottery I am not sure. That is why I was curious. I am not a potter but I have been watching a marathon of pottery channels on youtube, and I just subscribed to your channel. I don't get out much anymore with a bad heart and handicapped. But I get to watch and wonder. Basically, my easiest escape is to live vicariously through others on youtube. I know it makes me sound pathetic but for years I worked long hard hours and burnt my candle from both ends and the middle and now when I keep getting reprimanded by my doctors for doing anything. Not saying this looking for sympathy, just Letting you know why I am curious and not out there trying it for myself. And I am not lazy. I hope the questions I post don't bother you. I do not want to be too big of a nuisance. I just believe it is important to learn something new every day until we are no longer around.
Won't 650-700 C not even technically hit bisque fire range? Will pottery fired at temperatures that low even hold water? I'd been led to believe it takes quite a bit more than 700 C to make even just decent earthenware stuff, let alone all the other types of ceramics. Where is the disconnect?
You have been misinformed. While some of it does depend on the clay used, most clays will turn to ceramics by the time you get to 700 C. Ancient Southwestern pottery was all fired quite low, most of it below what modern bisque ware is fired to. Rarely was native pottery fired over 850 C, that was hot enough to make it into ceramics.
Hi I am a laborer driller. we go to depths of 100ft & more in some cases. I have found pure blue / black clays! I am a beginner at knowing clay's etc. I would love to make my own pottery with this pure amazing thick and yet so malleable clay. I would like thoughts and opinions with your experience. I could send pictures, its quite lovely to see.
I AM SHOCK THAT PEOPLE DONT USE A FORGE TO FIRE UP YOUR POTTERY THAT YOU COULD BUILD OUT OF A PROPANE TANK VERY EASY TO DO OR YOU GET SOMEONE TO BUILD ONE FOR YOU
Sorry to tell you, but Ron Carlos, one of the potters featured here, passed away yesterday, May 3, 2023. Watch the documentary made about Ron at this link ruclips.net/video/jsq6zsfMxCs/видео.html
That is really too bad. Just based on videos and information I've seen about Ron Carlos, he seemed like an amazing individual, I really respect that his passion seemed focused on ensuring 2 that his family's heritage and traditions were not lost, as I feel is happening with an increasing rate.
It turns out that the clay on my property is excellent building material and I'm making a bowl a day until I have more pookies. I'm so glad I came out to your workshop.
That sounds great, I can't wait to see what you make Jenson.
If you have an old toilet sitting around you can grind it up to put in your clay for temper.
@@VoxNerdula or just broken terracotta pots :)
I've not created a single bowl or pot in my life, but stumbling across your videos has inspired me to get more creative and go out and create. Thanks for the positive energy.
You're welcome, have fun!
Can I just say thank you!! I’m a collector of hobbies and recently found a big spot of clay in our back yard, we processed a few pounds and finally started making things with it today but I wasn’t sure how to fire it without a kiln! So thank you SO much! ❤
Glad I could help! Have fun!
Great video with lots of useful information! 👍
Thanks Chad!
I love the fact that my two favorite RUclipsrs watch each other's videos
youre so informative and your passion for the craft really shines and makes you want to run out and start trying to make all kinds of pottery. thank you for sharing
Thank you!
Such a generous nature to spotlight the work of others. Thanks for the video and links, Andy.
You're welcome
I can't stop watching his videos. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge and making everything so accessible!
Glad you enjoy it!
I love it every time you say dooblidoo :D
Drilling piers on a construction site in Utah. Just got about 5 gallons of some extremely nice raw clay from around 20 feet down. Going to give it a try this weekend.
Very useful and best channel for beginners.
Thanks
This video will encourage a lot of people.
You managed to sneak into this video twice Angela!
@@AncientPottery I did? lol
Thank you so much for the introduction. May your artful hands be blessed!
I just LOVE this channel! It's so positive and you can follow on and practice these procedures yourself.
Beginning to think the term primitive pottery is a misnomer considering the excellence in design and form and function of these potteries. I'm actually astounded I hadn't really thought about Southwest pottery much other than the Anna pottery my dad had on a shelf. Thank you for your education.
Primitive refers to the simple tools and materials used
Some of those pieces you showed of other potter's works and pointed out they were produced with primative tools blew my mind. And some of them were just out right breath taking. A very inspiring collection of information. Thanks Andy.
You are welcome, glad you enjoyed it
yessss YESSSS this is exactly what I wanted from this channel
Glad I could give you what you were looking for.
I’m so glad I stumbled upon your channel! I can start turning my neigh sayers to your channel and videos to help explain and help inspire others to understand and take up the primitive lifestyle.
I am glad you found it too.
Great definition of primative related to pottery. As a beginner, this was excellent. Thank you!
Glad to hear it, thanks for watching
This is very informative! Thank you for taking the time to put this video together
You're welcome
Once again Andy , Yuve nailed it !
And what you said about resources for making primitive pottery were very limited back in the day ( 60’s/ 70’s) Thank you so much again for sharing & clarifying ancient pottery ways !
Thanks!
American Indians we love pottery and all the other ancient ways of life great video
You are incredible!! I only came across your videos yesterday but you inspired me to go out into the sunshine and gather my own wild clay!! Now I have a jar of clay and a jar of sand waiting for me to process them! Without your guidance I'd have never had the get up and go in me to do this myself so THANK YOU!!!
Thanks.I have truly been seeking how to make pots.I live in rural Kenya.
Just came across this video and it's inspired me to try my hand at Pottery, thank you so much for this amazing and helpful video!
I grew up in Central New York, we had Syracuse China that provided several retailers with Local Dinnerware and Now They are Gone! There are some remnants in pallets in Bisque form that still exist there and if you retrieve them there is a local Ceramic Shop, Clayscapes that will fire them for you!
Thanks Andy, I love the primitive definition.
Thanks Tony
This is a helpful video just started about 3 months ago learning to make Native American pottery
Glad it was helpful!
Good video! I can’t wait for the weather to improve so I can get put there and try my hand at making some primitive pottery.
Thanks! Have fun
This is an excellent beginners information resource video. thankyou Andy
Glad you enjoyed it
Thanks for another top-notch video Andy.
You're welcome
Well done and thank you for doing this video. Love your comments and insights.
You're welcome
That black pot you showed at 5:03 is stunning. Does that style have a name and were people producing it (or anything similar) in ancient times?
Well, kind of. The ancient equivalent is Ramos Black ceramics.nmarchaeology.org/typology/type?p=480 which is not decorated or as highly polished and the modern use of graphite makes those shine like metal.
@@AncientPottery Thank you so much! I appreciate the response!
you always produce such quality content, thanks! and thanks for providing other artists to look at. I was just thinking this morning that I need to build my first pot, then your video popped up. I spent a few weeks gathering clay from the Pala Chief mine in CA, then making a plaster drying basin, then wet processing it and adding temper from the local creek and I finally have a few bags of clay ready to use ( I think). Funny how the universe works like that.
Thank you, sounds like you are making good progress.
Great informative video Andy!
Thanks Will!
Its interesting watching this from scotland and seeing the ground you get the clay from. Our ground goes from wet to waterlogged to marsh and swamp. Dry ground is very unusual here but in the summer we might be lucky and get a few weeks of sun. There is a field near where i live that i know clay exists. Its a grey colour. Need to dig it out of wet mud though
Thankyou Andy for another very helpful video. 👍🏻
You're welcome
Thank you for beginner video! Hope to try my hand at it. I loved working with clay in high school, {not bragging} had A's on my sculptures & coiled pots. Not so good on the wheel I needed more practice to get the 'feel'. All these years thought pottery was out of my reach because I would need a kiln. Thanks to your channel so glad to find out pottery can be an option for me again! I have my hands in so many various creative projects, and gardening, cooking etc. etc. the most difficult thing is finding enough time to try/do everything I have an interest in, the list is long!
Hello, Andy, I hope you will show even more techniques in the future. I would love to learn more advanced stuff since there is not much information about pottery and clay. I want to suggest that you should speak a bit louder since the sound isn't the best. Thank you for the effort and huge resource of the information. Seriously you are sharing a lot of valuable information with this world.
I adjust the sound on my videos when I am editing them to the recommended level. For more advanced lessons you should check out the Ancient Potters Club where we make pottery together over Zoom every Wednesday night.
Thank you for sharing your art with us. ❤
You're welcome
Oh, so good; thank you.
You're welcome
Serious question have you ever used dried and crushed powdered eggshells in or on your pots? Just thinking eggshell is made of minerals. Kinda curious how it would work out if used on top of a slip coat.
Could be possibly used as paint? Might be interesting if fired but im not sure what will happen to the egg shells once fired. Might be like limestone where once it gets wet it expands and starts to crack
Damn andy your videos have improved a lot and I used to and still do love em. Very impressive all the hard work youve been putting in. 101k subs WOW
Thanks a lot, trying to up my game all the time.
Is there a book that covers everything about primative pottery?
No, I'm not being conceited when I say, I think my RUclips channel is about the most complete compendium of primitive pottery information in existence. There is an old book from the 70s amzn.to/3BgGavy but it's pretty general. And Clint Swink's book amzn.to/3B56poU which is specifically about Mesa Verde pottery. These are referral links so I make a small commission from purchases.
Nice
Thanks
I am curious about earthenware eating utensils. Is it possible use them without glaze? Thinking probably more for scooping dry foods, like flour etc.
Are there any decent howto books for traditional pottery without modern tools and materials? Any recommendations?
Have you ever thought of attaching a drill to your corn grinder
Not sure it would have the torque needed. But I have considered an electric motor
Love the content brother. Cheers from Estonia.
Thank you
Great video, Sir! A cut and dry method is what a lot of people are looking for, and it is helpful when getting started for sure, and also if someone hasn't got it quite right yet after many tries... This will get people on track for sure! As far as primitive goes, I assumed that primitive meant Crow Magnon! Anything made like Crow Magnon people is primitive.... perhaps it is a spectrum, being pottery wheel and store bought clay, fired with an electric kiln, being least primitive and using natural clay, building with hands only, and firing with fire... being the most primitive... Good stuff, since we are all primates, maybe everything we do is a level of primitive! LOL! 5 star video here, sir! we all agree!
Thank you so much.
As always a great and useful video. I've been trying now for sometime to work with clay from my land only. I believe there's a good-enough clay content in my soil that I can either water levigate it or dry levigate it to make clay. It passes the ring test that I learned from you and it does fire and stay solid. But even after firing it still has a slightly brittle nature to it. I'm guessing this is too much sand or temper in my mix? I have no experience other than this clay to compare it to. I am a complete beginner. But have managed to make a few cups bowls game pieces in a game board for my children. Even a small oya pot (not Sure on spelling of that -its a pot for watering in my garden.) And I've been pouring letting water soaked through it every day for almost a month now and it has not disintegrated yet. So I think I'm getting it and I've got good clay but I'm not really sure.
I would guess too much temper. But some clays are just not really good for pottery, and it could just be an inadequate clay. Maybe try levigating it real good, then adding only 20% temper and firing as usual. If it is still brittle but fully fired I would just say it is a shortcoming of the clay.
@@AncientPottery your so amazing. Thank you so much for taking the time to answer my question. It really helps to have someone with exsperance just to check with and bounce ideas off of.
Intresting avout using copper carbonite for making black and not green
What about using copper oxide for making greens?
3:07 these beaskets looks beautiful is there tutorial how to make it 😍 or did someone know name of technics which are used for these pieces.
They are just some baskets I have around, I am not a basket expert so can't say much about them. One is Seri, another is Tohono O'odham and another is some cheap junk from Pakistan or something.
650-700f is hotter than you get on your oven? That is the temperature range for electric self cleaning ovens when you hit the clean button. Ive used it to clean cast iron pans as it burns off everything including the seasoning and returns it to bare metal.
650 - 700 C, not F
Out of curiosity, what do you specifically mean/define when using the term prehistoric? Like literally as 'pre-history' or recorded data, or the more vague term we're taught as children to be anything from pioneer to dinosaur history?
I hear it mentioned with pottery to be more specific, but haven't really heard anyone nail it down exactly.
Add: As one (me in this case) gets into learning old techniques, I've mentioned this to a few colleagues of mine about primitive versus different terminology, because just the word 'primitive' is immediately attached to a certain stigma of lower evolution or intelligence. In the end I label it broadly as 'analog' and things are more readily understood by a certain generation. For me, analog kind of starts up in the 1900s, which by any measure of industry or revolutions today could be called primitive, i.e. the building blocks of a modern process. It's all intonations of the english language and part of the way people are taught/learn it--which if the education I received versus what my children are getting is any measure--becoming more and more deficient by the year.
Prehistoric can mean different time periods depending on where in the world you are. It means before written history. So in Europe that could be thousands of years ago, but here in the American Southwest it means before 1540 when the Spanish arrived. Some (easily offended) people now use the term prehispanic which is thoroughly stupid if you ask me.
@@AncientPottery Thank you for the clarification! I've yet to dig into some real meaty pottery books as the chemistry is the thing that interests me foremost, as well as the artistic creation itself.
I hear you on reversions of the 'PC' people though. I've recently been informed by my daughter that this is called 'Being Online'; to be used in a derogatory nature. Ugh, kids...
I have watched your videos for days here at home trying to learn as much as possible before I start. I especially like the history you have given. Now I will add a minor suggestion, 20 percent is not 4 to 1. Twenty percent is 5 to 1, 4 to one is 25 percent. Okie dokie, now back to the important stuff, watching the videos, tans a bunch for putting all this info out there!! I'm is the same desert about 65 miles south of Alpine, TX, off-grid for the last 5 years. Retrieved some hardened mud from one of my driveways mudholes yesterday and about to add water to it to break up/dissolve the clumps and see how it looks. May use a hammer to bust it up until I get a grinder.
I love that country around Alpine, it looks a lot like southeast Arizona. Now for your lesson. A ratio is not like a fraction, with a fraction the bottom number represents the total number of parts. With a ratio, no number indicates the total, only by adding the two numbers will you find the total. So 1/5 is 20% but a ration of 1:4 is also 20% because it means 1 part of the first element and 4 parts of the second with a total number of parts of 5. So to recap, 20% = 1/5 = 1:4
@@AncientPottery 👍💯😉
@@AncientPottery I see! Thanks a bunch.
I’m hoping for a referral of an infrared thermometer. What temp should I aim for? Thank you!
There’s a link in the dooblydoo. Make sure you get one that will go up to 1000 C or close to it.
Hi, this is a question I've wanted to ask- i live in the East of England and i live an area where we have lime-rich clay soil. Is this useable? Should i add temper and do a kiln test? My idea was to dry out the wet clay and filter it but is there a more convenient way? I can dig a little and easily find wet clay in my garden, so if its useable that'd be great!
I know this is a long ramble but it's hard to find info that's relevant to where I live! I'm very interested in the neolithic pottery of Britain, I love seeing the local finds!
Lime rich clays cannot be fired over about 820 C or the pottery can break when it gets wet. See this video ruclips.net/video/6A3j9HKtXtQ/видео.html
I want to learn a course for primitive pottery when i grow up
Thanks! Can I use just any 'ole sand for tempering, like the stuff in my backyard, or do I need something finer?
Also, sorry to hear about your buddy. I just started watching your videos.
Thanks. Yes just ordinary sand will do the trick.
Could you show us how to make a brick?
ruclips.net/video/mzJoImT__xc/видео.html
"primitive" or "prime" means "first" or "original". How did we end up making a bad name out of that? I like the values transmitted by this video.
Thanks
Have you ever tried using black sand, aluminum oxide, or sulfur powder in any of your clay pots? Just curious.
No, why would they be useful?
@@AncientPottery I am not sure. That is why I was curious. I am not a potter but I have been watching a marathon of pottery channels on youtube, and I just subscribed to your channel. I don't get out much anymore with a bad heart and handicapped. But I get to watch and wonder. Basically, my easiest escape is to live vicariously through others on youtube. I know it makes me sound pathetic but for years I worked long hard hours and burnt my candle from both ends and the middle and now when I keep getting reprimanded by my doctors for doing anything. Not saying this looking for sympathy, just Letting you know why I am curious and not out there trying it for myself. And I am not lazy. I hope the questions I post don't bother you. I do not want to be too big of a nuisance. I just believe it is important to learn something new every day until we are no longer around.
Won't 650-700 C not even technically hit bisque fire range? Will pottery fired at temperatures that low even hold water? I'd been led to believe it takes quite a bit more than 700 C to make even just decent earthenware stuff, let alone all the other types of ceramics. Where is the disconnect?
You have been misinformed. While some of it does depend on the clay used, most clays will turn to ceramics by the time you get to 700 C. Ancient Southwestern pottery was all fired quite low, most of it below what modern bisque ware is fired to. Rarely was native pottery fired over 850 C, that was hot enough to make it into ceramics.
Hi I am a laborer driller. we go to depths of 100ft & more in some cases. I have found pure blue / black clays! I am a beginner at knowing clay's etc. I would love to make my own pottery with this pure amazing thick and yet so malleable clay. I would like thoughts and opinions with your experience. I could send pictures, its quite lovely to see.
Would colored mica powder work to color the clay?
Maybe
Good video how is ron carLos doing ? i know he's in the hospital
He has gone into hospice as of the latest post on his Facebook this morning. 😔 A good guy and far too young for this.
@@AncientPottery ok thank you iknow he's a great guy
Oh my word… do you burnish the slip with a dry smooth stone??? 🤦🏼♀️no wonder my slip has been smudging and coming off. I was wetting my stone 😂
Burnishing is done with a dry stone
👍
Ohhhh So sorry too here about Ron... His tribe has lost a great insparation and teacher!!
Truly
Now thats a really handsome grandpa right there
is this your job or passion... wondering whats your job?
A little of both. I am a full-time RUclipsr
Doobly doo? Is someone a matt colville fan...?
Nope, Dooblydoo was coined by @wheezywaiter
I AM SHOCK THAT PEOPLE DONT USE A FORGE TO FIRE UP YOUR POTTERY THAT YOU COULD BUILD OUT OF A PROPANE TANK VERY EASY TO DO OR YOU GET SOMEONE TO BUILD ONE FOR YOU