Kiln Opening, Firing 99, Hewitt Pottery
Post about the 99th kiln opening a Mark Hewitt’s pottery in North Carolina.
Firing 99 was my penultimate firing at the Hewitt Pottery: I have only one more cycle of making left before heading off on my own. It will have been four years by the time I leave in April. The time has flown by. It seems like we are always in a rush to fill the kiln and then fire, clean pots, have a sale and then get right back to making again.
Shapes which were entirely unattainable in the beginning of my apprenticeship have become familiar, and at least somewhat attainable! Mark's pitchers, for example, have always held a special allure to me. When I first met Mark in Italy at a ceramics school called La Meridiana, I knew he took apprentices, and I was definitely intrigued by the thought, but it wasn't until I saw him throwing pitchers that I knew I wanted to work here. They are devilishly difficult to throw, and even harder to throw thinly. The goal is to make them light and balanced so that they feel empty when they are actually empty! I am getting there, but every one is still a challenge.
Yoshiya with one of his bud vases.
Over the last month, we have had the immutable pleasure of having Yoshiya Ohta here, visiting from Japan. Yoshiya’s father Tomitaka worked at the Hewitt Pottery for several months 26 years ago. Tomitaka runs a pottery in Japan now, which he inherited from his father. Yoshiya will take it over eventually, but he is 21 now and in training. He has been invaluable in helping us load, fire and unload the salt kiln over the last month. His energy and enthusiasm have lightened the sometimes onerous physical demands of the process. I’m looking forward to having him in the studio as we get back to making pots again!
Anyway, thats quite enough babbling from me; now, on to pictures of the pots, taken on the first morning of the sale.
First up, here’s a slideshow of Mark’s big pots…


















Now onto a “gallery” sampling of the pots Stillman, Yoshiya and I made this cycle. (I am trying out all of the methods for showing pictures to see which I like best.) First picture is of Stilly and Yo, ready for the sale, having just raked the barn. If you click on a picture, it will get bigger.
Some more of Mark’s Pots (another slideshow)…
Here’s a “carousel” of people shopping…
And finally here is (from left to right) the newest pile of wood we have to cut, my makeshift winter gardening tunnel, cover crop of winter peas, kale and rapini, and two rows ready for garlic to be planted. I am going to miss Mark’s garden patch!
Mark Hewitt Pottery Spring 2016 Kiln Opening, Firing Kay
This was a particularly exciting firing as the kiln was mostly filled with experimental glazes made using local materials. It was also Adrian's last firing as an apprentice at the Hewitt pottery. The firing went very smoothly and our expectations were mostly met by the results. The celadons and tenmokus were particularly dazzling, whilst the shinos proved a little trickier; some came out fantastically but others crawled. Overall we had some lovely results and a good sale. People responded well to the new glazes. At the end of the post I have included some pictures of my pots taken at Adrian's house with his flowtone backdrop. Personally I prefer seeing pots with a natural background such as a barn door or a grassy knoll, but in order to build a portfolio I am trying to document in a more professional manner.
Big pot by Mark Hewitt. This one is called "Mr Softie" |
Empty kiln (apart from all the wads!) |
Big pot by Mark Hewitt. I love the shape of this one. |
Detail of the glass drip on this pot. |
This one sold before the sale began. |
Big pot by Mark Hewitt
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Marbled plate by Mark Hewitt. |
Two part vase by Mark Hewitt. Regretting not snapping up this one-it was a super second. |
Some little espresso cups I made. |
Adrian and Patrick Rademaker (visiting up from Florida) stole my camera and blessed me with this picture of themselves, plus ruder versions! |
Tableware by Mark Hewitt. |
Jug/pitcher and mugs by Adrian King. |
We have to write a little something for each kiln opening. Here's mine. |
Droopy bellied sawanaky with shino glaze. |
Cider jar/jug by Adrian King. |
Celadon teapot by Adrian King. |
White glazed vase with finger wiped decoration by Adrian King. |
Heron scraffito tankard by Adrian King. |
Two carbon trapped shino tankards by Adrian King. |
Vase/wine vessel by Mark Hewitt. Ash glaze. |
Celadons! Oh glorious celadons, by Mark Hewitt. |
Big fat jar by Mark Hewitt. Tenmoku glaze. |
Tableware by Mark Hewitt. |
Nice tenmoku jar by Mark Hewitt. |
Two part vases by Mark Hewitt. |
A couple of my mugs. They have gone up from $9 to $15 this firing! Quite the increase! |
Rows of my pots. |
Casserole with lizard scraffito decoration. |
The full inscription reads "Bernie is boss." If I could vote in the elections here it would definitely be for Bernie! |
Display of my pots before the punters arrived. |
Shooter, sawanaky and honey jar hanging out together. |
Two of my tumblers. I like how the one on the right curves in at the top: I was aiming for this torpedo like shape. |
Covered dish by Adrian King. You can use the lid as a bowl to eat from too. |
I met this lovely lady at La Meridiana whilst she was on Mark's course. It is fun to catch up at kiln openings! |
Some of Adrian's platters. |
A rather handsome umbrella stand by Mark Hewitt. |
A couple of my smaller casserole dishes. |
Two part vase, celadon glaze. |
Two part vase, tenmoku glaze over red slip decoration. |
Sawanaky jar, shino gaze over red slip decoration. |
Sawanaky jar, celadon glaze over red slip banding and scrafitto marks. |
Vase, celadon glaze over red slip banding. |
Two part vase, tenmoku glaze over red slip decoration. |
Tumblers, tenmoku on the left, shino on the right |
Barrel mugs, celadon glaze over red and white slip decorations. |
Small bud vase, tenmoku glaze. |
Shot glasses/shooters, celadon glaze with red slip dots under. |
Large casserole dish, celadon glaze over red slip dots and lines. |
Large three handled casserole with fish decoration, tenmoku glaze. |
Small casserole dish, albany slip over red slip decoration. |
Firing Kay, Mark Hewitt Pottery, Spring 2016
By 9am we were concentrating on the third chamber. Mark manned the ship, slowly transitioning our stoking pattern from feeding both chambers two and three to just three. Adding a little extra air by keeping the fire box doors slightly ajar helped the burn. By 12:30pm we were done, much to everyone's surprise. We had planned on going until midnight if necessary, and had cut enough wood to do so.
The relief of being done early had us all in high spirits and we enjoyed some cold beverages, a few loop-de-loops on the rope swing, and some marvelous coconut crust quiche that Carol had made. Mark sprayed down the rafters of the kiln to cool them off, we clammed her up and slid in the damper. A glorious collection of bees made their hive in the red clay earth near the kiln, seemingly unaware of all the activity around them. All in all the firing was a very smooth affair. We got the kiln hot, really hot, all over--in the front of the third chamber the cones were obliterated. The test rings we pulled out looked good too.
Reduction. |
Adrian checking the cones in the back of the first chamber. |
Adrian and Dustin stoking the firebox. |
Exactly where we want to be. |
Before we started stoking this chamber. |
Evan was down visiting me from Burlington, VT. I roped him into helping out with the firing. |
Stoking the firebox of chamber 2. |
View of the kiln from the side. |
Firebox door. |
You can see the reflection on the bellies of the pots in there. |
Test rings. Glazes looking good. Clay nicely cooked. |
More test rings. |
Stillman stoking into the middle of chamber 2. |
This little guy was hanging out on the wood stack. |
Mark, Adrian and I all incised quite a few lizards on our pots this time. There are so many lizards around the Hewitt pottery! |
The kiln from afar. |
Mark and Evan clamming up the main fireboxes. |
Working hard. |
Evan stoking chamber 3 firebox. |
These look like ant excavations but are actually made by small bees. |
Bee art. |
Stoking the very back of the kiln; heavy reduction going on! |
You can just see some fat bellies here. |
During the cool down the color of the pots goes from bright orange to red. |
Springtime Kiln Loading. Hewitt Pottery 2016.
But enough of our springtime woes; I have lots of pictures to put up of our recent kiln loading. This week we are firing Mark's new kiln (built in 2009). It is the 11th time: the firings are stamped alphabetically so we're up to firing 'Kay.' We had a lot of bisque-ware to glaze due to all the experimental glazes we have formulated, so glazing took us a few days, but then the loading went pretty fast. Having an extra pair of hands has really helped. Stillman Browning-Howe has been working with us for the last few months, mostly laboring, as he will replace Adrian as a full-on apprentice when he leaves in a few weeks. So it's been like having three apprentices rather than two. He has helped a great deal with all of the laborious tasks needed to get ready to fire, like cutting wood, grinding kiln shelves, moving wood, mixing clamming, and rolling wads.
We stacked the kiln quicker than anticipated so now have extra time to fire. I am on the night shift tonight which will be a pretty slow easy rise in temp, then we'll take turns tomorrow bringing it up to top temp by midnight. Saturday is when we really fire it off and work the temperature back through the second and third chambers. Here are some loading snaps:
Mark-ware |
Fat jars and two part vases |
More of Mark's pots |
Some of our glazes |
One of Adrian's platters. Love this decoration. |
Some of my casserole dishes. I was pretty pleased with how these took shape and am excited to see them fired. |
Casserole from above |
Adrian-ware |
All lined up and ready to go |
The kiln. Expectant. |
First row of shelves in the back chamber |
We raise them off the floor to allow for ash and ember build up |
Cones! These bend at specific temperatures to show you how the firing is going. We fire to cone 12 which is over 2400 degrees F. |
Mark's pots ready for wadding |
What next? |
Starting the back stack. This is much more awkward. |
Back chamber of the kiln done. The path down the middle is for stoking thin strips of wood. |
This is where Adrian and I spent several days glazing all of our pots. |
Stillman; master wad and coil roller! |
Mark and Adrian carrying precious cargo. |
Big ribbon pot by Mark Hewitt. |
Stillman squeezing through a tiny gap to help pull the last big pot into the kiln. |
Its in! Relieved faces—we didn't chip or break any big pots despite the tight squeeze. |
Ready to be bricked in |
Side view of the second and third chambers |
One of Mark's medieval pitchers from the salt kiln. We were using this as a water jug during loading—slightly excessive as it holds about two gallons! |
The beginning of stacking the front chamber |
Pitchers, jars and small pots ready to be put in |
Carrying boards into the kiln |
Starting on the front stack of the front chamber |
One of the final shelves goes on |
Almost done! |
We have a good amount of wood ready |
Firebox door |
We decided to build a bag wall to prevent the flame rushing under the shelves straight into the second chamber. |
Bricking up the third chamber |
View of the kiln all clammed up and ready |
The kiln gods are watching |
Firing Kay |
The kiln is lit: we start with gas up to 600 degrees F. |
The beast awakens! |
Test Firing Results!
Below are a smattering of pots, not necessarily the best of the bunch, just a sampler to show some of the different results. It was getting dark when I took these snaps so the colours aren't as bright as in real life, but anyway first up here are some of mine...
Shino yunomi. |
Celadon yunomi on left, ash glaze on right. |
Ash glaze sppon holder on left and celadon on the right with red slip trailed under. |
Celadon barrel mug with red slip dots, ash glaze dipped over on the rim. |
Shino tumblers with iron and manganese slips trailed under. |
Albany slip vase over wiped red slip. |
I am actually unsure of what glaze combo this is. Will have to ask Adrian! |
Various mixing bowls. |
Celadon mixing bowl with red slip decoration. |
Small bowl with nuka glaze over red slip swirls. |
Pair of tumblers with white glaze swishes over celadon (plus 1% iron oxide). |
Same as the tumblers above. |
Large platter with one glaze on top of another with wax resist rings. |
Celadon vases. These look super in the sub: a shiny light translucent blue. Very nice. |
Celadon serving bowls with red slip trailed and dotted underneath. |
Celadon over sgraffito decoration. |
Celadon over red slip. |
Ash glaze stein. Look close and you can see the head and arms of a sgraffito lizard. |
This glaze is called Rocky 12, believe it or not. |
Close up of the Rocky 12 surface. |
Celadon serving bowl with red slip dots under. |
Getting ready for the sale. |
Four medium sized pots from the salt kiln, out on sale this weekend. |
Big unfired pots. |
Ribbon vase (unfired). I'm excited to see how this one turns out. |
Fish stew anyone? |
Testing. Testing.
We live worryingly close to the Carolina Tiger Rescue. |
View of Mark's house and the pottery from across the pond. |
Raw materials. |
Apatite out to dry in the sun because we needed some to mix a glaze ASAP. |
Close up of the apatite. |
Test tiles galore. |
Test tiles. |
These were some shinos I tested (most of them not applied thickly enough). |
Glaze measuring station |
Some of the new glaze tests. |
Bisque pots awaiting glazing above, raw glazed pots below. |
Bisque-ware |
Some little yunomi I made for tea or whisky, or whatever tipple you prefer. |
Mixture of mugs and yunomi. |
Some of my tumblers. |
Some of Mark's bisque pots. I love these--they remind me of Greek or Roman wine vessels. |
Mark in the midst of a Sunday morning's glazing. |
Mark's mugs. Slip trailing in progress. |
The new kiln. |
Different angle on the new kiln. |
Re-doing the floor of the kiln. |
Big pots in the snow. Love the shadows! |
Big pot in the snow |
The melt is on! |
Our vegetable garden is not looking very happy. |
The chickens don't like getting cold feet. |
Happiness is a bowl of kitchen scraps. |