Sunday, August 1, 2010

Studio is a comin'! New clay!
















So much stuff going on besides makin' pots......
Still trying to get the studio together, (pictures of the garage half to come soon),
the first picture is of a shelf i just hung (wow) and a window at the bottom of the half flight of stairs down to the basement that i'm planning on cutting out to make into a doorway for quick access out to the garage.
In my dreams, when the super garage/studio is built, i'd love to have an artist in residence/intern/apprentice and offer the now basement studio as a living space....

Also big huge thanks to the pottery boys who gave me a bunch of cone 6 and cone 10 standard clay and great lakes clay! I've almost strictly used A.R.T. clay, but mostly out of habit from college and my apprenticeship, it'll be good to try the standard which i've embarrassingly never tried as of yet. The donation was so generous of the boys, and super convenient for me in this period of spending money.
Definitely check out the pottery boys website as they have a very interesting business model.
Thanks Glenn and Keith!!!

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Made some small bowls....


Made some small bowls yesterday, a fourth of what i need. Feels good though as it's the first time i've really gotten back to making pots since we've moved into our new house.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010






After composing an email weeks ago, i waited two weeks until i was comfortable enough to close my eyes and press send. I was asking potters for spare kiln brick in order to build a high fire gas kiln. I was very timid about asking people for "stuff," but about 20 minutes after pressing send, David Toan, owner of Terra Incognito Studio sent me a reply.
He stated that he had in his kiln yard, the old studio kiln built by Delores Fortuna, that he always hoped to put back in use but had just recently come to terms with it being one of those things he might never get to.

The kiln is a welded angle iron frame with welded iron mesh siding. The floor is made of soft brick, and the walls, ceiling, and roll away door are ceramic fiber. The kiln is a 22 cubic foot updraft. Burner system included.

I showed up to Terra Incognito with a rented 16ft truck with a lift gate and my brother-in-law (and hired gun) Bob, ready to load the kiln. The kiln had been sitting in Dave's kiln yard for the last four years wrapped in tarps. But the plastic tarps were whether beaten and riddled with holes and rips. Upon removing the tarps we were immediately confronted with two small wasps nests; small or not, they were buzzing around are heads. At one point i caught a wasp in my hand with leather gloves and tried to squish it, but it had found a pocket of my fist were it wasn't getting squish and in turn i could feel through the leather glove, the wasp biting! Luckily no one was stung.
After the wasps were cleared, we gave the kiln a push to see what we were dealing with and found that because of a particularly heavily rainy spring and beat up tarps, the fiber kiln was completely engorged with water. Bob and i together could not rock the kiln! We ended up using a car jack to boost up one side and then prop it with bricks, and then jack up the other side in order to slide a cart under it. With the cart, we were able to roll the kiln over to the truck.....

At the truck we discovered that the kiln was almost exactly the size of the lift gate, and that the cart was just a little bite bigger. Side note, when the lift gate goes up, it goes up on a downward angle instead of flat, an added complication. In the end, we pushed the kiln and the carts front two wheels onto the lift and then braced the back end with bricks as the back wheels hung off the end. Because of the shear unbelievable weight combined with being propelled up and on an angle, and holding the suspended back end of the cart, we recruited eight other men from the studio to support the kiln as the lift gate unbelievably held and lifted the kiln up!
Through the whole process of getting the kiln onto the truck, i had almost "called it" at multiple points not only because of the whole ridiculousness of everything that was happening and how dangerous it was, but also, in the back of my mind realizing that this was only half of the process, i still had to get it off....!

After saying our thanks and goodbyes, we hit the road home and i immediately began phoning and texting everyone i know to see if they'd enjoy risking their lives with me. To the rescue came two of my hulking cousins Connor and Colin; also my friend Tyler was already waiting at the house, so including myself, there was five of us.
It seemed to be alot easier getting the kiln off the truck, then on, probably because we had the system in place of getting it on, we now had a good method for getting it off. With steady hands and strong backs, the kiln was unloaded and is waiting to be refurbished and installed.
It has fallen into some disrepair, but nothing that can't be fixed. The roofing has collapsed which can easily be fixed, but the walls and door are it pretty good shape needing minor repair.

Can't wait to high fire!

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Introducing..............















































"It's a Boy!
May 30, 2010
"Max"well Alexander McCabe
6lbs 14oz"

I made these signs to surprise Terri when the troop came home from the hospital. It came out a little weirder than i expected due to the small secret windows of opportunity I had to work on it, but all the funnier.

Big sister Amelia is terribly proud to be able to hold Max while standing up (under supervision).

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

My Toothless Invention!


My daughter Amelia lost her two front teeth last week within a few days of each other, and tonight she just lost a third!
Here's a picture of a Dwayne Naragon bowl in use.
Dwayne was my teacher at Eastern Illinois.
Evidence that his work does indeed function.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Gotta' Git Some Mon-knee!

Kiln for sale!
6 years old, mint-ish shape! (a couple of dings)
Only selling to help finance the starting construction of new studio space.
Carl Mankurt of Chicago Kiln Service was just out to fix up my other kiln, and cleaned up this kiln (new thermocouple, i think that was it).

KS-1027
Single Phase
Chamber: 23-3/8" opening, 27" deep, 7.0 cu. ft.
240V: 48 Amps,
11520 Watts.
Cone 10, 2350 degrees. Shipping weight 290 lb.
208V: 48 Amps, 9980 Watts.
Cone 6, 2250 degrees. Shipping weight 290 lb.

this is a link to the kiln:
http://www.skutt.com/products/ks-1027.html

$900.00

773.304.6804
dan

Thursday, April 29, 2010

OK! i get it!


Do all potters get this as much as i do???
We just moved to a new house, and so my whole pottery studio is in my mom's garage. When you open the door, you are faced with a wall of everything. I'm just starting to set up my temporary studio space at the new house, and so i was stopping by to pick up a few things. I pulled into my moms drive the other day, and the neighbors had a construction crew over. Apparently they are having a new fence installed. I had just opened the garage door and was looking through things when one of the workers stopped over to show me how the new fence was temporarily going to effect my mom letting the dog out, and asked if it would be OK to park their cement mixer at the end of my moms drive. As we were talking, he saw into the garage and at one point asked if i was a painter. I told him that i was a potter and quick showed him a vase that was readily accessable. He said that he liked it, and then said he knew about pottery because of the movie "Ghost" as he closed his eyes, began to sway his hips, and moved his hands together up and down as though making a pot in the air.
I was of course laughing, but this is not the first time i've gotten the Patrick Swayze reference, this is not the hundredth...
I think the movie "ghost" should be more celebrated in the pottery world for bringing hand made pottery to the mainstream. Maybe.
Also, i'm looking for a life sized cardboard cut out of Patrick Swayze for my classroom and booth, so if anyone knows of a lead, please let me know!!!

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

A Post without a Picture? Response!

I asked a science teacher at school and found the answer I was looking for.
I previously stated that I had experienced a very odd thing at the pug mill, in the blend of mixing, I found a chunk of clay that was ice cold (i.e. none of the obvious things applied, clay coming from an outside source...).
I was looking for a response along the lines of some sort of chemical reaction, similar to the clay heating up due to fiction.
I explained the circumstances of what i was doing, mixing clay, and that i reached to dislodge a chunk of clay that was stuck on the auger blade, and was shocked to find that the clay ice cold amongst a body of luke warm clay.
The teacher explained that it sounded like an exothermic (exit) endothermic (enter) reaction.
That because the clay I was reaching for, was stuck to a blade and not moving amongst the rest of the moving particles, it could not react to the fiction of the rest of the clay.
And so it reacted in the opposite manner, exothermically.
Because that chunk of clay could not mix and warm through fiction, the greater mass of clay endothermically pulled the stuck chunk of clays warmth into its own body as the stuck chunk pushed its own warmth exothermically into the blending clay body.
And so, by comparison, the difference in temperature was quite dramatic.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

A Post without a Picture?

It seems to me wrong to post without a picture,
but i had a weird occurrence the other day, (for the second time) that i couldn't figure out, and couldn't chalk up to some freak occurrence again.
Keep in mind that this is the second time this has happened:
I have experienced, and can logically understand why, when mixing clay, the clay actually heats up (warms) if it mixes for a longer period due to the friction of the matter moving and rubbing against itself in the hopper. Similarly, I know that microwave ovens generate heat by causing the water molecules in the to-be-heated item to rub together causing friction heat. I've also heard that clay warming through the mixing process is not a good thing, as the warmth kills off the good bacteria that lend to the clays plasticity.
This i can understand.
The other day, I was mixing clay in my classroom, using a peter pugger, and i reached in to dislodge some clay that wasn't blending enough, and when i touched it, i was surprized to find that it felt like someone put ice cubes in the barrel. I was so surprized. The clay itself was freezing cold, but only a little cold patch mixed in with all the other regularly temperatured clay.
I have no idea how this could happen, all the clay is store in my classroom, so it's not coming from outside.
I speculated that maybe a student actually put ice in the machine, but i really really don't think that that is the case.
Is there some way that this can happen chemically through the process of mixing?
i'd love to figure this out. Maybe i'll go and talk to a science teacher and post my findings if any.
If anyone has thoughts or knows the answer, i'd love a reply.

Monday, January 4, 2010

The studio is lost!?!























After a few years in the residence of a beautiful, but compact two flat, we've decided to move on to bigger and better horizons. We're currently in a rental, but also in the last stages of purchasing a place all to our selves. Though it was sad to leave such a great and established studio space, and though i don't yet quite know what the future will hold in terms of production, it will be great! The house we're trying to buy has a little old coal room that is probably going to make due as a temporary space. Back to humble beginnings...
and yeah, i get it, the shop was messy.