John, you mentioned that they would use waste cooking grease, but I would love to see how to safely use one of these (fuel selection, filling, and lighting.) Great tutorial on a staple home item!
I third! I loved that not only did you explain a vital tool that we are no longer familiar with, but you made one the way they would have! I agree. Id love to see how to safely use it without burning my house down! Loved this.
This should be made into a regular series. Even if it's not talking about making stuff on the pottery wheel. You could sit there and make stuff while just talking about random 17th/18th century general life. I'd love to watch a series like that
@@Noctuloquor you mean where you have to pay $10 a monthly/$100 yearly for a subscription. That "Townsend Plus"? I was commenting it for here. Not something I have to pay for.
A little pottery vocabulary… Scratching the clay where you want to attach another piece is called “scoring”. The clay slime you use to stick pieces together is called “slip”. Another enjoyable Townsends video.
I’m totally transfixed watching Jon throw a little oil lamp. I did take ceramics in college, so knowing the process myself makes a million times more amazing. Mad respect for the amount of dried clay on Jon’s work pants. Seriously, I can totally tell how much time he dedicates to pottery by the dirt on his pants.
As for candles: most people today think that 'snuffing' a candle means to put it out. Before the mid 19th century, it meant to trim the wick so that it *wouldn't* go out. Pope, in his _Peri Bathous_ , rephrases the command, 'snuff the candle', as: *'Yon luminary amputation needs;* *Thus shall you save its half-extinguished life."* One can find old 'snuffers' still in antique shops, usually resembling a pair of scissors with a little box on one blade: the cone-shaped items we often think of as 'snuffers' were then called 'extinguishers'. There were different degrees of candles as well: the cheapest would be tallow dips; then there would be bayberry and beeswax; the brightest, cleanest, and most expensive would have been of spermaceti. For lamp oils, there was a similar hierarchy: common grease or lard oil; fish oil; various seed oils; and at the top, sea-mammal ('train oil') or whale oil.
I have made an oil lamp from nothing more that a piece of cotton string (shoe lace in my case), a button, and a container to hold the oil (in my case an empty tuna can). Crazy simple. Of course you can make a makeshift candle from crayons and a piece of cotton string. Put the sting in the center of a few crayons, tie the whole bundle together with more string, then light the string. All of these i did as a kid as "fun experiments" from books. And they all work, more or less. The lamps you made were much more efficient and complicated, but still pretty easy to make.
Jerome- Can vegetable oils be used? Like expired olive oil or canola? Some restaurants in the 70's and 80's were filling wine bottles with an oil ( I think) . Then cotton string steeped in the oil was threaded up through a fired clay bead. (A very lovely touch to an Italian dinner.)
@@lynnodonnell4764 Yup, olive oil was actually a common lamp fuel because it has a low combustion temperature but stays liquid till fairly low temperatures unlike animal fats. Heck you can make a cheap but stupidly long lasting emergency candle with a can of Crisco (or an off brand) and just shoving as wick(s) down into it. A big can of Crisco can last days. (which if you didn't know Crisco is just a hydrogenated vegetable oil which makes it solid at room temps)
Always glad to find you at the potter's wheel. I've never thought how common or how far back the potters use of the extruded form might go. Thanks for always giving us so much to think on.
That's why I love watching and learning about things like this. Also watch bushcraft videos as well. Heck I know how to make candle out of a 6lb tub of vegetable shortening that could last months if used properly.
I was just playing a game called Kingdom Come Deliverance and loved the oil lamps on the table. Long story short I couldn’t wait to make one at some point. Now today not even 12 hours later my favorite revolutionary homesteader is giving me a great tutorial. I’ll be going on a new rabbit hole dive of your videos. Thank you for all you do! Love from Alaska ❤ what an interesting world
Heck, i have oil lamps in my house right now. Storms are a thing, and loss of power sucks if all you have are electric lights. I also have a coleman gas lamp, because those are SO much better than oil lamps, but less safe indoors. You can make a huge oil lamp using a crisco can and the oil in it. Dangerous, but if you need it, you need it.
John you need to take off your wedding band when throwing clay. The clay is abrasive and you are thinning the band. Thanks for the videos. I enjoy watching.
Tech w Sean- As a young girl I saw a beautiful beaver coat w a BEAUTIFUL lining- I was very intrigued. Then as a young woman I saw an armoir with a BEAUTIFUL crafted interior. Hummm- 2 items w hidden aesthetics... Going to college to get my BA in ART there was often discussions concerning: IS IT ART OR CRAFT ? CAN FUNCTION ALSO EXHIBIT BEAUTY? Can FUCTION also have FORM?. My mom was close friends with Georgia Wallers whose husband wrote the book 'Bridges of Madison County' turned famous movie starring Clint Eastwood & Meryl Streep. Okay, Georgia was also a potter. Here's where I'm going w this... I have a Georgia Wallers pitcher sitting out for DISPLAY in house w other college roommates. I'd come home and find the GW Pitcher in the kitchen cupboard. I'd put it out for display. This kept up for some time. " Okay, I asked my roommates in frustration, " Who keeps putting my pitcher away"? " Why is it sitting out anyway when it's not in the fridge"? one said in her defense. " Because not only is it FUNCTIONAL it is also ART " I replied. "That's ART???" qiured my roommates. "But you put it in the fridge w water in it. ART is something you look at, not a kitchen item." The whole Form&Function concept was lost on them. This was way back in the 70's. To 'Keep the Peace' I kept it out of view when not in use.
Good go old man...at 64 years 11 months with over 35 years of potting, I feel you did okay for the time period. Talking and throwing is a special skill. Hats off to you.
Excellent videography guys. The lighting and the camera angles on the wheel were really nice. I really respect Jon's versatility. Lots of talent, but practical. And humble! Well done!
What a wonderful discovery! Your channel turned up when I was looking around for ancient oil lamps, and how they were made. I wanted to make one and didn't know how to go about it. Now I do, and will! I look forward to hours and hours of watching all the episodes you offer. Great stuff! Thank your for your time and effort in producing this fascinating content.
Like a few of the other people have mentioned, I'd like to see a more in depth video showing more of the finishing touches and details, such as the firing and glazing methods used to seal the clay after it's been fired. Thank you for another good video.
Absolutely wonderful. I watched it as I was going to sleep and missed the end so watched it again when I woke up. Great job. I’d love to see how they would have glazed and fired something like this back then without our modern kilns and commercial glazes. You did a video about salt glaze a long time ago but it was more of a this method existed than a here’s how they did it step by step. Really hope you turn this into a series. It was such a calming and peaceful way to learn about something! Oh, I was also really surprised by how long the wheel kept turning once you got it going! I had been imagining that you’d have to be kicking at a wheel like that almost constantly and couldn’t figure out how you’d manage to turn something intricate with the movement of your leg making your arms and hands move too. So that was fascinating. Would love to see how to build one at some point too. That would be really interesting.
It's crazy how until the late 1700s oil lamps hadn't changed in 30000 years, it was just a bowl, a wick, and the oil, you can "make" one by taking a shell, filling it, and put a string sticking out at an angle
My mother in law has oil lamps all over her house since we live in a hurricane impact area. She gave some to her kids for emergencies so I have them in various rooms of my house as well.
@@Marlaina I have some of those, too. I live in a thunderstorm/tornado prone area and we have at least one power outage every year and sometimes more than one. We had one just 4 days ago. All we got where I live was a dust storm that knocked down some tree limbs that hit some power lines, but there was a tornado about 25 miles Southeast of here and a really bad one 90 miles to the South. The power was back on by 9 pm, so it was still light outside, so the oil lamps weren't needed, but if the outage had lasted longer I would have lit them.
Amazing 1,100 likes in a few hours. And almost 10 000 views. I love this channel. Nothing could be better than a relaxing, educational program. Thank you.
It probably did have a layer of oil on everyone's homes. Just look at any homes in the last 100 years where people smoked. They get used to a level of grime. They don't even notice it.
@@machintelligence yeah if you burn a LOT of candles you can get a soot buildup. The last house I lived in, we moved in when it was 13 years old and it was all original paint. The prior family had floorstanding candle holders in many locations around the living room. You could see soot circles on the ceiling and "shadows" running up the walls where the candles were.
Fascinating. I absolutely love an appreciate these videos. You guys really are something special and produce something we all know on some level that we need. Something that reminds us that life could be much simpler, and possibly happier
People back then would use grease lamps or rush lights. Rush lights are easy to make. Just strip a part of the rush, dip it in animal fat, then let them dry.
Dear Mr. Townsends, my family love your videos. However my dad is not interested in cooking or history. Strangely, he REALLY likes pottery and the thrill of the potters wheel. I really appreciate you making a pottery video because it's one of the few videos my dad will watch with the family and kids
I remember when I was a kid my grandma had a class measuring cup she collected grease in. One day, the power went out, and she pulled out some lamp wick and shoved it in the grease, laying it across the spout and lit it, making herself a lamp for the kitchen.
Is it only me or did anyone elses heart miss a beat around 3:45 thinking Jon would have a giant spider in his face? (It was actually just the shaddow of the lamp)
I would love to see how you made the pottery wheel, that wheel is spinning really smoothly and I don't know what sort of bearings they would have been able to make to allow it to spin with so little resistance.
Greased bearings made from impregnated hardwoods are pretty good. Not are good as hardened steel balls but plenty good enough for that application. They're high maintenance in comparison though.
With that hole in the bottom you could put a peg on a board mounted to a wall and to be able to keep it from being knocked of the wall that the lamp will sit down on.
Get some of those dollar solar lawn lights. That's what Styxx used then he had an extended power outage. Having something like this would be a great backup, but having a lightsource that requires no additional inputs other than being left outside during the day can be a lifesaver.
The moment you mentioned wick drippings, I wondered why everyone wouldn't simply make a wick holder towards the center of the ceramic vessel. It's the easiest thing to do. And of course, that is exactly what you do.
I feel like this is going back to the channels "roots", but we get a longer video and no sales pitch 😁. Honestly, back then, I didn't mind the sales pitch because the videos are always informative. Great video.
Honestly, I don't think there's anything wrong with a little self-advertisement in one's content as long as it isn't obnoxious and doesn't detract from the experience. You gotta keep in mind that selling these products is pretty much Townsends' main source of revenue, providing them with the budget to make all these cool videos.
I so badly want to sit down on a stool next to him as he shows this, and kick the wheel for him. Brings back manual woodworking and pottery work memories with my grandfather
Very nice. In seeing the down view at 22:15 I would have put 3 or maybe 4 tubes on that to give it the option to light more than one wick creating more light.
With the size of vessel, that might not work. There’s a distinct potential of flame instability from insufficient oxygen if the wicks are too close together.
Not sure what they called it back then, but that wet clay "slime" is called Slip. Had entire containers of it when I took ceramics since you don't always work with water.
I read about the native coastal tribes, that Lewis & Clark interacted with, using a certain kind of oily fish called candlefish (eulachon) as a lamp. I can see the benefit of oil or oil-imbedded items as a light source alternative to candles. Gotta wonder about the smell though
I threw clay at a local art / craft store. It was fun to try. A group of us there brought up Ghost. Couldn't let that go by. I managed to make nice little pot that has doodads in. Can't have too many of those 😂. I tried to make my second item but had bad luck and ended up with not enough clay to make anything of a decent size. I'd like to do it again, but I don't know where I'd put the creation. 🍯
Grease Lamps! although they are not made by Jon www.townsends.us/products/redware-grease-lamp-lantern-p4142-p-864
John, you mentioned that they would use waste cooking grease, but I would love to see how to safely use one of these (fuel selection, filling, and lighting.) Great tutorial on a staple home item!
Justin- Count me in also! Wud love to see how to 'replicate' the process. Perhaps, at least, using modern materials for the burning fluids.
I third! I loved that not only did you explain a vital tool that we are no longer familiar with, but you made one the way they would have! I agree. Id love to see how to safely use it without burning my house down! Loved this.
Kitchen grease is easy to render down. I render down all of my grease and oils for reuse.
I would really appreciate that video as well!!
@@lynnodonnell4764 You just fill it with olive oil, conola oil or any cooking oil you find at the grocery and stick a wick in it.
This should be made into a regular series. Even if it's not talking about making stuff on the pottery wheel. You could sit there and make stuff while just talking about random 17th/18th century general life. I'd love to watch a series like that
Great idea. I'd love to watch that also!!!
It actually is a regular series over on Townsends Plus. Seven episodes so far.
Yes!
@@Noctuloquor you mean where you have to pay $10 a monthly/$100 yearly for a subscription. That "Townsend Plus"? I was commenting it for here. Not something I have to pay for.
Yes, I was just thinking that
A little pottery vocabulary…
Scratching the clay where you want to attach another piece is called “scoring”.
The clay slime you use to stick pieces together is called “slip”.
Another enjoyable Townsends video.
Just when I thought I understood where Townsends as a channel was going after all those years, John starts throwing pottery (at us). I love this.
He made a little beehive clay oven years ago. It's a good one too.
I for one, am here for the chaos. The wholesome wholesome chaos.
He had pottery videos from way back. Just not a whole lot.
I appreciate that "throwing pottery" wordplay.
I’m totally transfixed watching Jon throw a little oil lamp. I did take ceramics in college, so knowing the process myself makes a million times more amazing. Mad respect for the amount of dried clay on Jon’s work pants. Seriously, I can totally tell how much time he dedicates to pottery by the dirt on his pants.
As for candles: most people today think that 'snuffing' a candle means to put it out. Before the mid 19th century, it meant to trim the wick so that it *wouldn't* go out. Pope, in his _Peri Bathous_ , rephrases the command, 'snuff the candle', as:
*'Yon luminary amputation needs;*
*Thus shall you save its half-extinguished life."*
One can find old 'snuffers' still in antique shops, usually resembling a pair of scissors with a little box on one blade: the cone-shaped items we often think of as 'snuffers' were then called 'extinguishers'.
There were different degrees of candles as well: the cheapest would be tallow dips; then there would be bayberry and beeswax; the brightest, cleanest, and most expensive would have been of spermaceti.
For lamp oils, there was a similar hierarchy: common grease or lard oil; fish oil; various seed oils; and at the top, sea-mammal ('train oil') or whale oil.
Lucias1958
I deeply enjoyed your commentary! And the quote was so interesting.
Do you make candles? Are you an reeanctor of a specific time period?
I did not know the reason for the space between wick and outer edge in betty lamps. That makes perfect sense. Thank you, this was lovely.
I have made an oil lamp from nothing more that a piece of cotton string (shoe lace in my case), a button, and a container to hold the oil (in my case an empty tuna can). Crazy simple.
Of course you can make a makeshift candle from crayons and a piece of cotton string. Put the sting in the center of a few crayons, tie the whole bundle together with more string, then light the string.
All of these i did as a kid as "fun experiments" from books. And they all work, more or less.
The lamps you made were much more efficient and complicated, but still pretty easy to make.
In the Laura Ingalls Wilder's books, she describes her mother making a button lamp like that.
Jerome- Can vegetable oils be used? Like expired olive oil or canola?
Some restaurants in the 70's and 80's were filling wine bottles with an oil ( I think) . Then cotton string steeped in the oil was threaded up through a fired clay bead.
(A very lovely touch to an Italian dinner.)
@@lynnodonnell4764 Yup, olive oil was actually a common lamp fuel because it has a low combustion temperature but stays liquid till fairly low temperatures unlike animal fats.
Heck you can make a cheap but stupidly long lasting emergency candle with a can of Crisco (or an off brand) and just shoving as wick(s) down into it. A big can of Crisco can last days. (which if you didn't know Crisco is just a hydrogenated vegetable oil which makes it solid at room temps)
Always glad to find you at the potter's wheel. I've never thought how common or how far back the potters use of the extruded form might go. Thanks for always giving us so much to think on.
We sure take our modern electric lights for granted. This was a very enjoyable video. Cheers!
That's why I love watching and learning about things like this. Also watch bushcraft videos as well.
Heck I know how to make candle out of a 6lb tub of vegetable shortening that could last months if used properly.
It was en-light-ening……eeeehhh???!………sorry, i cant help loving a good pun!
It tickles me to see old movies and TV shows where someone lights one candle and the whole room lights up enough to hurt your eyes.
The serged edge of a towel makes an ideal wick. Thanks, John.
Lovely video! I'd love to see more videos of you throwing!
Knew I'd find you here! Hope you have a nice day Florian!
I was just playing a game called Kingdom Come Deliverance and loved the oil lamps on the table. Long story short I couldn’t wait to make one at some point. Now today not even 12 hours later my favorite revolutionary homesteader is giving me a great tutorial. I’ll be going on a new rabbit hole dive of your videos. Thank you for all you do! Love from Alaska ❤ what an interesting world
I'm a potter and I'm absolutely going to try throwing some of these. Thanks for the inspiration!!!
Heck, i have oil lamps in my house right now. Storms are a thing, and loss of power sucks if all you have are electric lights. I also have a coleman gas lamp, because those are SO much better than oil lamps, but less safe indoors.
You can make a huge oil lamp using a crisco can and the oil in it. Dangerous, but if you need it, you need it.
John you need to take off your wedding band when throwing clay. The clay is abrasive and you are thinning the band. Thanks for the videos. I enjoy watching.
What a wonderful and informative demonstration. I must say,
I throughly enjoyed this particular episode. And look forward to seeing more!
Functional art is really interesting, I’ve always been drawn to the Japanese stuff but some of the early American pieces are really nice too.
Tech w Sean- As a young girl I saw a beautiful beaver coat w a BEAUTIFUL lining- I was very intrigued. Then as a young woman I saw an armoir with a BEAUTIFUL crafted interior. Hummm- 2 items w hidden aesthetics...
Going to college to get my BA in ART there was often discussions concerning: IS IT ART OR CRAFT ? CAN FUNCTION ALSO EXHIBIT BEAUTY? Can FUCTION also have FORM?.
My mom was close friends with Georgia Wallers whose husband wrote the book 'Bridges of Madison County' turned famous movie starring Clint Eastwood & Meryl Streep. Okay, Georgia was also a potter.
Here's where I'm going w this...
I have a Georgia Wallers pitcher sitting out for DISPLAY in house w other college roommates. I'd come home and find the GW Pitcher in the kitchen cupboard. I'd put it out for display. This kept up for some time.
" Okay, I asked my roommates in frustration, " Who keeps putting my pitcher away"? " Why is it sitting out anyway when it's not in the fridge"? one said in her defense.
" Because not only is it FUNCTIONAL it is also ART " I replied. "That's ART???" qiured my roommates. "But you put it in the fridge w water in it. ART is something you look at, not a kitchen item." The whole Form&Function concept was lost on them. This was way back in the 70's.
To 'Keep the Peace' I kept it out of view when not in use.
Good go old man...at 64 years 11 months with over 35 years of potting, I feel you did okay for the time period. Talking and throwing is a special skill. Hats off to you.
Excellent videography guys. The lighting and the camera angles on the wheel were really nice. I really respect Jon's versatility. Lots of talent, but practical. And humble! Well done!
What a wonderful discovery! Your channel turned up when I was looking around for ancient oil lamps, and how they were made. I wanted to make one and didn't know how to go about it. Now I do, and will! I look forward to hours and hours of watching all the episodes you offer. Great stuff! Thank your for your time and effort in producing this fascinating content.
Thank you Jon that was very interesting to watch. A lot of information I had not given much thought to.
Like a few of the other people have mentioned, I'd like to see a more in depth video showing more of the finishing touches and details, such as the firing and glazing methods used to seal the clay after it's been fired. Thank you for another good video.
Absolutely wonderful. I watched it as I was going to sleep and missed the end so watched it again when I woke up. Great job. I’d love to see how they would have glazed and fired something like this back then without our modern kilns and commercial glazes. You did a video about salt glaze a long time ago but it was more of a this method existed than a here’s how they did it step by step. Really hope you turn this into a series. It was such a calming and peaceful way to learn about something!
Oh, I was also really surprised by how long the wheel kept turning once you got it going! I had been imagining that you’d have to be kicking at a wheel like that almost constantly and couldn’t figure out how you’d manage to turn something intricate with the movement of your leg making your arms and hands move too. So that was fascinating. Would love to see how to build one at some point too. That would be really interesting.
i sure do hope ya keep making more for this series, this is a lot of fun to watch and learn from
John Townsend is a cool dude
It's crazy how until the late 1700s oil lamps hadn't changed in 30000 years, it was just a bowl, a wick, and the oil, you can "make" one by taking a shell, filling it, and put a string sticking out at an angle
Ive always wondered why there wasn't any soot inside old buildings that had frescoes. Olive oil burned clean.
We just bought some! They are awesome and I highly recommend them.
This was fantastic, please do more pottery work, fascinating stuff!
Fun as well as interesting to watch….would love to see more like this! Thanks
I absolutely love what you're doing. I'm about to start a personal notebook on your old recipes and cool tidbits of knowledge and advice.
Really enjoyed this video watching you make pottery. Thanks! 👍👍
Very similar to oil lamps from Ancient Rome. Clearly it was an effective technology!
@Luke Genness I’ve got one on my shelf just in case!
My mother in law has oil lamps all over her house since we live in a hurricane impact area.
She gave some to her kids for emergencies so I have them in various rooms of my house as well.
@@Marlaina I have some of those, too. I live in a thunderstorm/tornado prone area and we have at least one power outage every year and sometimes more than one. We had one just 4 days ago. All we got where I live was a dust storm that knocked down some tree limbs that hit some power lines, but there was a tornado about 25 miles Southeast of here and a really bad one 90 miles to the South. The power was back on by 9 pm, so it was still light outside, so the oil lamps weren't needed, but if the outage had lasted longer I would have lit them.
Jon: "You have to be very careful with these open vessels so they don't spill their oil."
Also Jon: 4:50
D:
I see it now. 😂
Great to see that you’re also a potter. Love see more pottery making on the channel.
Love these Jon! Can you make a video about making your potters wheel?
Amazing 1,100 likes in a few hours. And almost 10 000 views. I love this channel. Nothing could be better than a relaxing, educational program. Thank you.
Lighting is such a simple things in this day and age that we take it for granted. Excellent video, very eye opening.
What an interesting topic! Another would be how the potters wheel is constructed.
People love modern wicks so much they keep adding extra ones.
I have always found that quite bizarre.
If they didn't regularly clean, their rooms would get a fine layer of oil on everything after enough time.
It probably did have a layer of oil on everyone's homes. Just look at any homes in the last 100 years where people smoked. They get used to a level of grime. They don't even notice it.
Lots of soot as well, even if you used candles. It is the glowing carbon particles that provide the light.
@@machintelligence yeah if you burn a LOT of candles you can get a soot buildup.
The last house I lived in, we moved in when it was 13 years old and it was all original paint. The prior family had floorstanding candle holders in many locations around the living room. You could see soot circles on the ceiling and "shadows" running up the walls where the candles were.
Wow! That extrusion tool way back in time really surprised me! I love how I learn so much from this channel 😃
The more things change, the more they stay the same, I guess.
Fascinating. I absolutely love an appreciate these videos. You guys really are something special and produce something we all know on some level that we need. Something that reminds us that life could be much simpler, and possibly happier
Great job Jon, very good class on pottery . Thanks for sharing with us. Fred.
People back then would use grease lamps or rush lights. Rush lights are easy to make. Just strip a part of the rush, dip it in animal fat, then let them dry.
Dear Mr. Townsends, my family love your videos. However my dad is not interested in cooking or history. Strangely, he REALLY likes pottery and the thrill of the potters wheel. I really appreciate you making a pottery video because it's one of the few videos my dad will watch with the family and kids
Really cool, Jon!
I remember when I was a kid my grandma had a class measuring cup she collected grease in. One day, the power went out, and she pulled out some lamp wick and shoved it in the grease, laying it across the spout and lit it, making herself a lamp for the kitchen.
Loved this tutorial Jon! Thank you 😊
Absolutely fascinating !
Really cool, thanks.
That was a LOT more interesting than I thought it was going to be! Thanks Jon!
As a ceramicist this is fantastic, very educational
just what I'm looking for, relaxing history storytelling to calm my anxiety at 4 a.m.
Hello from Detroit Michigan brother thank you for what you do and your knowledge and expertise and for taking us on your adventure through time 👋
I'm glad you made one these I experimented a couple years ago with an improvised one. It didn't turn out so well.
This channel = tranquility.
Is it only me or did anyone elses heart miss a beat around 3:45 thinking Jon would have a giant spider in his face? (It was actually just the shaddow of the lamp)
Must've just shaved Jon got that Babyface
This was just great, thanks Townsend's...
Please do more of this series!!!
Demonstrating once again that there isn't much that Jon can't do. Well-done!
He could get thrown in the 18th century and he'd fend just fine.
Had to be more self sufficient back in the day
Just Brilliant. 👍
TFS, & take care too everyone. ❤🙂🐶
as a potter myself its fun to see a new shape for use ill be making some of them :)
Heck yeah ! Was just looking at the channel to see if anything was posted !
@7:26 I half expected to hear Unchained Melody playing in the background!! 😁
The definitive Bluebottle cover?
I would love to see how you made the pottery wheel, that wheel is spinning really smoothly and I don't know what sort of bearings they would have been able to make to allow it to spin with so little resistance.
Greased bearings made from impregnated hardwoods are pretty good. Not are good as hardened steel balls but plenty good enough for that application. They're high maintenance in comparison though.
With that hole in the bottom you could put a peg on a board mounted to a wall and to be able to keep it from being knocked of the wall that the lamp will sit down on.
And great topic, I use a"whale"oil lantern at the 1812
Get some of those dollar solar lawn lights. That's what Styxx used then he had an extended power outage. Having something like this would be a great backup, but having a lightsource that requires no additional inputs other than being left outside during the day can be a lifesaver.
I light all my camping with oil lamps, and hadn't;t thought about recycling oil! Now I am off to start planning to render out the chunks!
Thanks for this Jon! I'd really be curious to see the glazing and firing processes one day!
The moment you mentioned wick drippings, I wondered why everyone wouldn't simply make a wick holder towards the center of the ceramic vessel. It's the easiest thing to do. And of course, that is exactly what you do.
I feel like this is going back to the channels "roots", but we get a longer video and no sales pitch 😁. Honestly, back then, I didn't mind the sales pitch because the videos are always informative. Great video.
Umm... they sell the oil lamps, tho.
Honestly, I don't think there's anything wrong with a little self-advertisement in one's content as long as it isn't obnoxious and doesn't detract from the experience. You gotta keep in mind that selling these products is pretty much Townsends' main source of revenue, providing them with the budget to make all these cool videos.
I so badly want to sit down on a stool next to him as he shows this, and kick the wheel for him. Brings back manual woodworking and pottery work memories with my grandfather
Holy cow that was some awesome set lighting
Really fit with the subject of the video.
Very nice. In seeing the down view at 22:15 I would have put 3 or maybe 4 tubes on that to give it the option to light more than one wick creating more light.
With the size of vessel, that might not work. There’s a distinct potential of flame instability from insufficient oxygen if the wicks are too close together.
Jon on the wheel are possibly my 2nd favorite of the Townsends videos. (Have to put the old cookie videos with Ivy 1st)
more clay work please
Jon made Diwali lamps. Cool.
John could you do a video on making a kick wheel plese🙂
Very relaxing!
Jon, I'd like to see how that extruder is made, how it works. Damned clever device.
Great video! Informative, interesting, and engaging. Thanks 🙏
In Dutch we call these little lamps 'snotneuzen' (snot noses) because they would drip oil a bit like a runny nose :D
Not sure what they called it back then, but that wet clay "slime" is called Slip. Had entire containers of it when I took ceramics since you don't always work with water.
Is there anything you can’t do, Townsend?? Great work!
Beautiful thanks!
Great video and very informative 👍 👏
I read about the native coastal tribes, that Lewis & Clark interacted with, using a certain kind of oily fish called candlefish (eulachon) as a lamp. I can see the benefit of oil or oil-imbedded items as a light source alternative to candles. Gotta wonder about the smell though
The Greenlanders and Icelandic folks burned whale & seal oil. Quite a stink in their turf longhouses.
I'm always surprised that you can get the wheel moving fast enough to work clay with just a few kicks and no mechanism
You could run a special where you film yourself fabricating clay ware that patreons and/or Townsends Plus members order.
I love those ye olde vice grips on the clay extruder! 😁
I threw clay at a local art / craft store. It was fun to try. A group of us there brought up Ghost. Couldn't let that go by. I managed to make nice little pot that has doodads in. Can't have too many of those 😂. I tried to make my second item but had bad luck and ended up with not enough clay to make anything of a decent size. I'd like to do it again, but I don't know where I'd put the creation. 🍯
With Things going the way they have been we all might need to learn this skill. Seriously.
Special appearance by Jon Potter today!
When I was doing pottery at school we'd make up a mix similar to what you've got on the edge of the jug, and call it slurry.
Cool. And, I'm sure there was an 1800s fire extinguisher laying around for if it got knocked over.
Can you do videos about all the tools and materials you would need for this, and one about firing the pieces?