What a clever idea...using marbles to burnish. I can, now burnish the inside of my pots that have a small opening. This is one of the most important things that I have learned for my pottery! Michael
Thank you so much for creating this video. I'm an archaeologist trying to learn more about pottery, and this kind of visual demonstration is so helpful for understanding prewheel methods. It's one thing to read descriptions of techniques/methods in books, but quite another to see them actually being done. Thank you for sharing your expertise!
6:12 Leaving that step, short to the rim and then flat rolling the next coil is great idea :) Ive been fighting to get my first coil going above the rim, staying even etc. Great video, filled with info, thankyou.
I used to live right near the qualla boundary I have some Cherokee blood going back a fer piece. I grew up knowing alot of Cherokee people when I was a boy most sadly have all passed away ,now. It's good that you carry on your native ways. And traditions.
Thank-you for taking the time to demonstrate for us how this is done. It was truly informative, as I have learnt from it a few new techniques! Andy Ward also demonstrates in his many videos on RUclips how pottery was made in America's southwest. From all these cultures, truly, there is much to be learned.
Joel~ I was so happy to see your video today. I have watched to many times before and being part Indian myself, I have spent years reading and researching and traveling to Pow-Wows, taking my children into the museums and pointing out the many lies & mistreatment & shames by the US Government so the grew up UNDERSTANDING NATIVE AMERICAN INDIANS HAVE MORE RIGHTS THAN WE TRULY DO AND WE OWE MUCH TO THEM… Anyway, I am an artist and I have done pottery for years and I have a great love for it but I watch you were such great admiration & TRUE APPRECIATION AS I REALLY VALUE YOUR EVERY TECHNIQUE….. I love your big hands as you work the clay and anybody watching your video I would think this is easy work but is anything but that!!!! You truly are A MASTER AT YOUR CRAFT & I WISH TO THANK YOU FOR YOUR RESEARCH & TO SHARE IT WITH US, FOR YOUR EDUCATION, & FOR YOUR TALENT, AS WELL AS TAKING TIME TO MAKE THESE INVALUABLE VIDEOS FOR PROSPERITY ❣️❣️❣️ BEST WISHES TO YOUR FUTURE ENDEAVORS ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
I never leave social media messages but I’m witnessing a master potter creating a masterpiece in clay and I am spellbound by the beauty that the creator works through your hands, Sir. It is my honor to see the endeavors of the ancient ones live again in these pots! Thank you for the medicine.
I love the mixture of cultures I hear in your voice. I was raised in the South then spent many years in New Mexico, living around the Pueblo Peoples. So I hear the Southern in your voice and recognize the Voice of Peoples in your voice. This is so lovely to hear in your voice. A beautiful blending of the Past and the Present, with an eye toward the Future. This is also a lovely weaving of cultures to increase Unity without any loss of the excellent features of either culture. As a teacher, I thank you, for preserving these skills so others can learn what was and what still can be. This may also give others ideas for new techniques. Increasing knowledge and skills is a Tradition amongst The Peoples. You have done yourself and your Heritage Proud! Blessing, Aunt B
very nice. I am cherokee (deer clan) as well and have been flint knapping for a while and want to try my hand at this. Very nice and great craftsmanship.
Given my proud Cherokee heritage, I cant help but be fascinated with hand building pottery, recently I've even been digging my own clay and using it..as well wanting to make my own outdoor kiln.
Joel Queen...really enjoyed watching this video....very instructive....I am trying to learn clay and coil build....have made a number of pots with the Luzella clay you used....have not fired any pots yet....noticed you have not done to much that is dated in 2018...hope your are ok and doing well....was wondering if you ever do workshops....would love to attend one....best and ever on...
I did pottery myself for many years Joel is a very gifted & well skilled n great Potter! To make such very big Bowls by his hands & not thrown on the wheel, like others would do is astunning ! The sound in the video wasn't so good but good demo thk you
Very interesting and useful demonstration. I only wish the periods where Joel Queen is working on the pot was silent and that all one heard was the sound of his hands on the clay or the ambient sound of the environment. The accompanying music is distracting and annoying.
What types of glaze or finisher do you use to seal the wears for food use I'm big on earth wear ... I'm getting ready for a trench fire and want to make alot of pieces to go in and use at home and for gifts
Great video but what happened to the audio? I could have sworn that when I watched this a while ago, it had the original audio of him describing what he was doing while he worked.
Joan Davenport I think it's just a bowl form made out of wood. It doesn't matter what it's made out of or the shape, it only serves as a template. and I imagine the cloth is something like linen or soft canvas. It's purpose is to keep the clay from sticking to the surface of the template. You could use plastic if you wanted.
Did you bisque fire before you put the pottery in the wood fire kiln? Or is that the color of the clay when it is bone dry? Looks like it was bisque fired.
I wish you had better aufio on questions asked and answers. Could not hear most questions. What was the clay type .Is it for sale? Must more interest if you had a better explanation audio.
I'm tryin to.figure out the deal with the marbles. Is it leather hard or bone dry when you burnish, and how much moisture? I didn't habe good results so much with oil, but a little moisture rubbed on w my finger for working that one spot. Man it takes a long time. I bought a package of marbles and was doing like you did to a bowl about half that size. After about 45 mins of messin w the marbles just like in your video, the just the bottom of the inside was smooth, but not shiny. I'm just tryin to pit fire a vessel that will hold water. Coffee cups. Little soup bowls. Burnishing w a smooth rock made it much shinier, but I'm sometimes breaking the cup as I'm holding it, or my hand slips and I break a coffee mug handle off. Frustrating, and burnishing takes forever.... I had better results with an old sock on my hand (still breaking a pot once in a while, some pressure is required with that one), or a piece of sheep hide w the fur down, also some pressure required. Somethimg about the wool hair fibers or knit pattern on the sock makes the shine, but w pushing on it a bit, whereas the rock covers a much smaller area at one time, but not as much pushing. Both still take for EVER. And smacking my cup handles and breaking them off (tryin real hard not to swear afyer the 5th one... ) So I tried the marbles. Didn't get it shiny. Does it have to be shiny to hold water? What am I missing?
Moisting bone dry piece isn't enough to make shinny much as you want... Applying terra sigillata and burnishing will give you the best result. And from my mistakes i think this method is little bit risky for small,thin walled and detailed stuff. Good luck with ur works✌
You need to slowly raise the temperature or it will shatter (remember all the moisture and any trapped air is trying to get out as the heat increases so the slower you do this the easier it is for it to escape) and you need to make sure there are not any large pockets of air in your clay or that you're not trapping air inside your coil joins. Hope that helps.
There are various things that will help with this problem - it's best to make sure your pottery is completely bone dry before you fire it (no longer cool to the touch); clay with lots of grog in it is less likely to shatter; thinner clay walls are less likely to explode than thick walls; no air bubbles/trapped air anywhere; slow firing to allow the moisture inside the clay to escape (both the raising of the temperature and the lowering of it should be gradual - a fully loaded kiln helps with that - everything will cool off more slowly). If the temperature changes are gradual enough, then even very thick clay objects can survive being fired.
I think I am doing well on my first two Pieces! I find when they start to dry There is Cracking Mostly around the Inside( bottom around) the bottom rim .I know there must be something I am doing but cannot figure out what? Do you think Its Too Thin?
I would like to know How Long do you wait to DRY Before you take it out of the Bowl and start pounding on it.(You didn't state how long.....If you do it too soon it will be too soft and if you dry it too much it probably would Crack...../Is it HRS?
How long it takes to get to the right dryness will depend on how much moisture is in the air and on the type of clay you are using. It's usually best to let things dry slowly; so, I usually cover my pottery, especially if the air is dry. You just have to experiment to see how quickly your clay dries.
Rape and genocide have existed before history, all humans have done it to eachother at some point. Slavery as well. It doesn't matter though its all wrong.
I think you are mistaken, Im also a native american, but 1/4 s american, also mostly indigenous my family was too poor to mix with Europeans. Native communities modern strife are comparable to the black community, poverty , hard drugs and single motherhood, incarcerations for the men. Starting to see that the welfare state, dependence on big government and the systematic destruction of the family are the true problems for us.
David Henson- Beg to differ. Sure am gettin tired of ALL people.making generalized assumptions about a general group of people based on the actions.if a few. To make those assumptions and false.stayements, one would have to.have met every... single... white person. Otherwise "all" statements, such as "White people don't think that way" are just false. That's like saying "Chinese people are cheap", or "Jews are cheats", or "Blacks are gangbangers", or "Mexicans steal." I know examples of.people of these races that fulfill all of these, and also examples that do not. But arguing w someone w their mind already made up and not an efficient use of time. Please curb the racism.
Not really traditional but it works, didn't they use hide, and there weren't any work benches, they used only hands and their legs to roll out clay, or like a drum head, hide stretched across a loom. That sat in their lap. I mean come on. We learned about this in social studies. I'm not saying he doesn't know, I'm just saying that he or his teacher got lazy and found an easier way the only traditional thing about making this pot is the material and the finished result resembling a traditionally made Cherokee pot
Let's get this straight...you think you and your social studies teacher know more about making a Cherokee pot than a Cherokee man who has been doing it for years? You have no idea what they used for a table...no one knows who wasn't there. Your racism and the racism in your school books tells you it must have been nothing, because how could Indians use anything like would be used now? This man is an award winning potter, I'm going to guess you are not. So maybe you should show some respect.
Well... you keep adding to the clay pot, seemingly weakining the rim. But the oddest part is when you, at the last minute, add an extra ingredient I'll call "The Snot" from your nose to the very top of the rim. Did anyone see? Wow! All I have to do is gather up some of my own snot for the rim. After all you were sniffling up some during the first half of the demonstration! Yeah! "Snot in a pot!" Yikes!
The music killed the video. People want to hear what he has to say. As far as it being Cherokee pottery it's only that because he is Cherokee. But it's not made anywhere near the ancient ways. My mother made ancient Cherokee pottery the ancient ways. She had museums try to have her make pottery without her putting her mark on bottom so they could say it was original ancient pottery. She wouldn't do it because it is wrong to fraud people.
What a clever idea...using marbles to burnish. I can, now burnish the inside of my pots that have a small opening. This is one of the most important things that I have learned for my pottery! Michael
Thank you so much for creating this video. I'm an archaeologist trying to learn more about pottery, and this kind of visual demonstration is so helpful for understanding prewheel methods. It's one thing to read descriptions of techniques/methods in books, but quite another to see them actually being done. Thank you for sharing your expertise!
You might also want to check out Andy Ward ancient pottery on RUclips.
6:12 Leaving that step, short to the rim and then flat rolling the next coil is great idea :) Ive been fighting to get my first coil going above the rim, staying even etc. Great video, filled with info, thankyou.
I used to live right near the qualla boundary I have some Cherokee blood going back a fer piece. I grew up knowing alot of Cherokee people when I was a boy most sadly have all passed away ,now. It's good that you carry on your native ways. And traditions.
Thank-you for taking the time to demonstrate for us how this is done. It was truly informative, as I have learnt from it a few new techniques! Andy Ward also demonstrates in his many videos on RUclips how pottery was made in America's southwest. From all these cultures, truly, there is much to be learned.
Joel~
I was so happy to see your video today. I have watched to many times before and being part Indian myself, I have spent years reading and researching and traveling to Pow-Wows, taking my children into the museums and pointing out the many lies & mistreatment & shames by the US Government so the grew up UNDERSTANDING NATIVE AMERICAN INDIANS HAVE MORE RIGHTS THAN WE TRULY DO AND WE OWE MUCH TO THEM…
Anyway, I am an artist and I have done pottery for years and I have a great love for it but I watch you were such great admiration & TRUE APPRECIATION AS I REALLY VALUE YOUR EVERY TECHNIQUE….. I love your big hands as you work the clay and anybody watching your video I would think this is easy work but is anything but that!!!! You truly are
A MASTER AT YOUR CRAFT & I WISH TO THANK YOU FOR YOUR RESEARCH & TO SHARE IT WITH US, FOR YOUR EDUCATION, & FOR YOUR TALENT, AS WELL AS TAKING TIME TO MAKE THESE INVALUABLE VIDEOS FOR PROSPERITY ❣️❣️❣️
BEST WISHES TO YOUR FUTURE ENDEAVORS ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
I never leave social media messages but I’m witnessing a master potter creating a masterpiece in clay and I am spellbound by the beauty that the creator works through your hands, Sir. It is my honor to see the endeavors of the ancient ones live again in these pots! Thank you for the medicine.
I really like seeing the old ways of doing pottery. I wish I could have been able to hear what all he was saying better. Thank u again
Two new techniques I learned, the coil shoulder and marble burnishing, brilliant! Thank you!
by far one of the best tutorials, from start to finish. Amazing. Loved it
This is amazing. I think I have learned more from watching this video than I did in years of pottery classes. Thanks.
I love the mixture of cultures I hear in your voice.
I was raised in the South then spent many years in New Mexico, living around the Pueblo Peoples. So I hear the Southern in your voice and recognize the Voice of Peoples in your voice. This is so lovely to hear in your voice.
A beautiful blending of the Past and the Present, with an eye toward the Future. This is also a lovely weaving of cultures to increase Unity without any loss of the excellent features of either culture.
As a teacher, I thank you, for preserving these skills so others can learn what was and what still can be. This may also give others ideas for new techniques. Increasing knowledge and skills is a Tradition amongst The Peoples. You have done yourself and your Heritage Proud!
Blessing,
Aunt B
very nice. I am cherokee (deer clan) as well and have been flint knapping for a while and want to try my hand at this. Very nice and great craftsmanship.
His accent reminds me of home... And that pot he turned out is gorgeous. Wow.
Given my proud Cherokee heritage, I cant help but be fascinated with hand building pottery, recently I've even been digging my own clay and using it..as well wanting to make my own outdoor kiln.
I learned so much after watching this video. 👍
Currently studying Visual Arts Diploma and I used your video to help me create my first hand build pot. Thankyou for this video. Brilliant
really enjoyed watching you i have been inspired and gained alot of knowledge thanks for sharing im in Australia
Thanks Anita. Nice video. Learned a lot .
Thank you for sharing this. I have always wondered how to fire without buying a crazy expensive kiln. It turned out very beautiful!
Beautiful work, Joel. Thank you. (P.S. All your videos need is you. You don’t need background or filler music.)
Beautiful! Can you make this closed captioned so it can be shown in college classes?
Thank you so much for the instruction ...Greetings from England.
Joel Queen...really enjoyed watching this video....very instructive....I am trying to learn clay and coil build....have made a number of pots with the Luzella clay you used....have not fired any pots yet....noticed you have not done to much that is dated in 2018...hope your are ok and doing well....was wondering if you ever do workshops....would love to attend one....best and ever on...
Enjoyed the video I hope you drink some tea or something for your sniffles 😉🌹
I did pottery myself for many years Joel is a very gifted & well skilled n great Potter!
To make such very big Bowls by his hands & not thrown on the wheel, like others would do is astunning ! The sound in the video wasn't so good but good demo thk you
The fifth time through. I am still learning new things. Thank you. How do you season a pot like that for cooking. Some type of vegetable oil and heat?
There are a few RUclips videos available on how to season a clay cooking pot.
thank you for posting this.
Great tutorial! Thanks for making and posting. How long was the pot fired for?
This is an incredibly intensive process. Whoa, this is amazing.
Also, every person in this comment section commenting on your cold is a piece of garbage.
Τhank you for the very nice lesson!Can you please tell me the time that clay needs to be baked?
Thank you for making this!!
عمل فني و إبداعي مميز، مادة الطين من المواد الطبيعية النبيلة الأكثر صحية في هذا العالم الصناعي المريض . تحية كبيرة للشعب الأمريكي الأصلي.... 💗💗💗💗💗
Nada Kodsia ?
I know that ain’t Cherokee syllabary
+Terry Finley yes sir you're absolutely right, I'm from Algeria North Africa, but I do have respect for these people. 💗
Love your work...hope to get to meet you and buy some of your pottery someday!
LOVE YOUR WORK!!!! Yer awesome Maaan!
😪.may Jesus bless him,thank you ,beautiful work hay.thanks Joel queen and Anita
Very interesting and useful demonstration. I only wish the periods where Joel Queen is working on the pot was silent and that all one heard was the sound of his hands on the clay or the ambient sound of the environment. The accompanying music is distracting and annoying.
magicnutcracker :
Turn the sound down
Please tell me, is there anything else needed in order to be able to put this pot in the fire without it cracking?
What types of glaze or finisher do you use to seal the wears for food use I'm big on earth wear ... I'm getting ready for a trench fire and want to make alot of pieces to go in and use at home and for gifts
Great video but what happened to the audio? I could have sworn that when I watched this a while ago, it had the original audio of him describing what he was doing while he worked.
Had the same problem and realized the audio was missing when using chromecast, but not when watching on my computer.
thank you for the heart attack at the end! i fliped out thinkin my tv came on by its self!
I know, right? Geeeeez
I've tried harvesting some clay. It seems really sandy. Is that normal?
Loved the marble trick
Really like your work, do you workany red clay from oklahoma
Did he ever give y'all the information about where you can order the clay?
I would love to purchase some of this clay, could you pleasegive me the information on how to order it? Thanks much!
Mason jar lid or a tin can lid works pretty good for scraping a hide when tanning, too. Doesn't accidentally cut the hide, like my knife will.
This is so beautiful.
It doesnt show the bowl underneath and what kind of cloth he is using when building the pot...can you fill me in on that part?
Joan Davenport I think it's just a bowl form made out of wood. It doesn't matter what it's made out of or the shape, it only serves as a template. and I imagine the cloth is something like linen or soft canvas. It's purpose is to keep the clay from sticking to the surface of the template. You could use plastic if you wanted.
cheese cloth or soft material.
What is the kind of clay you were going to tell us about? Lizella?
Did you bisque fire before you put the pottery in the wood fire kiln? Or is that the color of the clay when it is bone dry? Looks like it was bisque fired.
Hoopa Digital I am pretty sure it was bisque fired first. Like you said!
I wish you had better aufio on questions asked and answers. Could not hear most questions. What was the clay type .Is it for sale?
Must more interest if you had a better explanation audio.
How many hours does the piece have to be fired?
Perfection!!
I'm tryin to.figure out the deal with the marbles. Is it leather hard or bone dry when you burnish, and how much moisture? I didn't habe good results so much with oil, but a little moisture rubbed on w my finger for working that one spot. Man it takes a long time. I bought a package of marbles and was doing like you did to a bowl about half that size. After about 45 mins of messin w the marbles just like in your video, the just the bottom of the inside was smooth, but not shiny. I'm just tryin to pit fire a vessel that will hold water. Coffee cups. Little soup bowls. Burnishing w a smooth rock made it much shinier, but I'm sometimes breaking the cup as I'm holding it, or my hand slips and I break a coffee mug handle off. Frustrating, and burnishing takes forever.... I had better results with an old sock on my hand (still breaking a pot once in a while, some pressure is required with that one), or a piece of sheep hide w the fur down, also some pressure required. Somethimg about the wool hair fibers or knit pattern on the sock makes the shine, but w pushing on it a bit, whereas the rock covers a much smaller area at one time, but not as much pushing. Both still take for EVER. And smacking my cup handles and breaking them off (tryin real hard not to swear afyer the 5th one... ) So I tried the marbles. Didn't get it shiny. Does it have to be shiny to hold water? What am I missing?
Moisting bone dry piece isn't enough to make shinny much as you want... Applying terra sigillata and burnishing will give you the best result. And from my mistakes i think this method is little bit risky for small,thin walled and detailed stuff. Good luck with ur works✌
Beautiful
please-someone give the man a hankie! ☺️
Why is there no audio when Joel is speaking? I'd love to hear him teach.
I enjoyed watching. eddiespottery
any tips for clay ceramic water filters made this way?
Why does my pottery keep exploding in the fire ? Thermal shock ?
You need to slowly raise the temperature or it will shatter (remember all the moisture and any trapped air is trying to get out as the heat increases so the slower you do this the easier it is for it to escape) and you need to make sure there are not any large pockets of air in your clay or that you're not trapping air inside your coil joins. Hope that helps.
also let your pottery dry for a few days before firing
make sure you get all the trapped air out of it!
There are various things that will help with this problem - it's best to make sure your pottery is completely bone dry before you fire it (no longer cool to the touch); clay with lots of grog in it is less likely to shatter; thinner clay walls are less likely to explode than thick walls; no air bubbles/trapped air anywhere; slow firing to allow the moisture inside the clay to escape (both the raising of the temperature and the lowering of it should be gradual - a fully loaded kiln helps with that - everything will cool off more slowly). If the temperature changes are gradual enough, then even very thick clay objects can survive being fired.
thankyou mr queen.
thank you .I was wached your Utube .one q, sen. do you hand uzuly. right hand or left hand?I,m Korean.thanks.
Thank you
You can use an old credit card cut to shape as a rib.
I think I am doing well on my first two Pieces! I find when they start to dry There is Cracking Mostly around the Inside( bottom around) the bottom rim .I know there must be something I am doing but cannot figure out what? Do you think Its Too Thin?
Joyce I Benedict I would say you are probably wetting the inside too much when you add a coil. It puddles in the bottom and washes out the clay.
what was that type of clay he kept mentioning? lisella?
Lizella Clay- www.sheffield-pottery.com/Lizella-Clay-p/rmlizell.htm
Thanks! Much obliged. I'm kind of a pottery newbie, but i'm interested in making cooking pots.
Cook roots, and wild rice, corn pudding
love this.
I like your method of using a cloth in your mold, or bowl, so you can move the cooking pot around
I would like to know How Long do you wait to DRY Before you take it out of the Bowl and start pounding on it.(You didn't state how long.....If you do it too soon it will be too soft and if you dry it too much it probably would Crack...../Is it HRS?
How long it takes to get to the right dryness will depend on how much moisture is in the air and on the type of clay you are using. It's usually best to let things dry slowly; so, I usually cover my pottery, especially if the air is dry. You just have to experiment to see how quickly your clay dries.
What was the name of the clay?
Ocean Lani
Lizella Clay Works
I love this...I am part chickasaw.
Interesting
You can look on the web under "Lizella Clay". He got his from Sheffield www.sheffield-pottery.com/Lizella-Clay-p/rmlizell.htm
WHY Does this awesome video only have 53 likes????
Good video. However it would be nice to be able to hear what he is saying rather than the music
Kinda strange that they buy in the clay I would have thought they process it from a local source
Thanks tho your audio stopped a few minutes in
He looks like Elvis Presley
Actual pottery making at 3:02!!!!!
Bom dia amiga
My last name is also Queen
the music isnt really needed. Especially music that is from a sitar. Otherwise very nice demonstration.
Sick
I am looking for something for kids.........pottery for kids. I am nine years old
Second, do you know the saying: t
Al mal tiempo buena cara. Then, you shoot your video
Should have waited until his cold had passed. Very distracting.
Youbsaid it uou had to go out and reinvente everything
Everything his culturaly significatif.
.
Cherokee huh? Never hurt any other tribes right?
is that even REMOTELY relevant to a video about pottery?
Oh you know those peaceful natives, then "white" people showed up and invented violence
They didn't bring us violence. They did bring us rape and genocide though. And some really bad diseases.
Rape and genocide have existed before history, all humans have done it to eachother at some point. Slavery as well. It doesn't matter though its all wrong.
I think you are mistaken, Im also a native american, but 1/4 s american, also mostly indigenous my family was too poor to mix with Europeans. Native communities modern strife are comparable to the black community, poverty , hard drugs and single motherhood, incarcerations for the men. Starting to see that the welfare state, dependence on big government and the systematic destruction of the family are the true problems for us.
Sorry can't take the sniffing.
I have serious respect for this man's love of his people and this tradition. White people don't think this way. I wonder why.
David Henson- Beg to differ. Sure am gettin tired of ALL people.making generalized assumptions about a general group of people based on the actions.if a few. To make those assumptions and false.stayements, one would have to.have met every... single... white person. Otherwise "all" statements, such as "White people don't think that way" are just false. That's like saying "Chinese people are cheap", or "Jews are cheats", or "Blacks are gangbangers", or "Mexicans steal." I know examples of.people of these races that fulfill all of these, and also examples that do not. But arguing w someone w their mind already made up and not an efficient use of time.
Please curb the racism.
@@pcolvin4235 😁 🤣
This video should be in 10 minutes not 50
Not really traditional but it works, didn't they use hide, and there weren't any work benches, they used only hands and their legs to roll out clay, or like a drum head, hide stretched across a loom. That sat in their lap. I mean come on. We learned about this in social studies. I'm not saying he doesn't know, I'm just saying that he or his teacher got lazy and found an easier way the only traditional thing about making this pot is the material and the finished result resembling a traditionally made Cherokee pot
Let's get this straight...you think you and your social studies teacher know more about making a Cherokee pot than a Cherokee man who has been doing it for years? You have no idea what they used for a table...no one knows who wasn't there. Your racism and the racism in your school books tells you it must have been nothing, because how could Indians use anything like would be used now? This man is an award winning potter, I'm going to guess you are not. So maybe you should show some respect.
Well... you keep adding to the clay pot, seemingly weakining the rim. But the oddest part is when you, at the last minute, add an extra ingredient I'll call "The Snot" from your nose to the very top of the rim. Did anyone see? Wow! All I have to do is gather up some of my own snot for the rim. After all you were sniffling up some during the first half of the demonstration! Yeah! "Snot in a pot!" Yikes!
Crude n Primitive
The music killed the video. People want to hear what he has to say.
As far as it being Cherokee pottery it's only that because he is Cherokee. But it's not made anywhere near the ancient ways. My mother made ancient Cherokee pottery the ancient ways. She had museums try to have her make pottery without her putting her mark on bottom so they could say it was original ancient pottery. She wouldn't do it because it is wrong to fraud people.