You will never guess what I did today but that picture may give you a hint.
Jessie's been taking pottery classes at the local arts and crafts center for awhile and she has been urging me to go with her. I've been intrigued by the idea of pottery-making ever since I went to a camp when I was about sixteen that had a wheel and a teacher who showed me a few things and it's always been at the back of my mind that I would like to learn more.
But, but, but...
I mean, I'd have to GO there and I'd have to talk to people and I'd have to disturb my routine and that is just all a lot for me. Also, the class starts at 9:30 in the morning which is about the time I am generally having my second cup of coffee. In Lloyd. Which is at least a half hour away from where the classes are in Tallahassee.
So I kept hemming and hawing and finally, when a new season of classes began, Jessie just signed me up, paid for it, and then told me about it.
That child.
She is the boss of me.
But who isn't?
Sigh.
So this morning I got up at 7:30 and you know what? It's not even light at that ungodly hour. It is dark. You have to turn the light on to brush your teeth. Who voluntarily DOES this?
You? Well. Good for you. I don't.
But I did today. And I got to Jessie's house a few minutes late which was fine. She has told me repeatedly that this class is really laid back and that most of the people in it are around my age and I know she was far more interested in getting me out and into some sort of socialization than she was in me learning how to make a bowl. She made it all so easy though, that I really had no choice but to go to the class with her. And she was so sweet to me, showing me where things were, how to do certain things and she'd bought the clay and a set of tools for me. I wasn't nervous in the least and felt comfortable right away. The teacher intimidated me a little bit but overall, she's cool. Two of the other members of the class were new too, so we were all learning together.
I can't say I'm any damn good at throwing clay onto a wheel and whether or not I'll ever make anything that resembles a decorative or utilitarian item is yet to be seen. Out of three tries, I got one small bowl that I would not use to put cat food in. Gayle, the teacher, told me that it was a fine bowl for my first try but then I pointed out that she'd made most of it. And she had, while demonstrating for me.
Meanwhile, Jessie made three bowls that I'd be proud to call mine and I think this was her first work on the wheel. She did free-form things during the last session.
It's too early to tell if I can feel an affinity for the other women but I can't see why not. We didn't really talk much about anything but clay and clay-related issues. But a few comments were made that led me to believe we are not that different, especially the older ladies and me, including Gayle. We appear to all be old hippies and the younger women seem to be on a similar philosophical level but I could be wrong about that.
So I did that today and of course Jessie and I had to go get lunch and then I took her to go pick up her car which had been serviced and I came on home where I made a soup with many, many vegetables in it.
Let us just call it Peter Rabbit's Favorite Vegetables Soup.
Despite not wanting to make a huge pot of the stuff, you know I kept adding things until there was no more room to add anything.
And yet today was the first time I ever participated in one of their offered activities.
That's pretty crazy.
And I learned a few things today, mainly that you need to use your body for strength instead of your wrists, sometimes the wheel does not need to spin so fast, and that after you play with clay, you need to clean up your space. Already- good rules for life, too.
I'm smiling. At supper we were talking about a potter's wheel that had been gifted to one of us and what is was like to use it. And the wheel giftee is 95. You never know.
ReplyDeleteYou absolutely never know.
DeleteGood for you! I know how difficult it is to put oneself out there in a new situation. The soup looks so good.
ReplyDeleteMostly it was hard to get up early. I am so spoiled.
DeleteI can’t think of another human who would be a better boss of you!!! Carol in Atlanta
ReplyDeleteNor can I.
DeleteYour pottery class sounds so good. I think you will have loads of fun. The fact that you've already made something is a great start.
ReplyDeleteYour veggie soup looks outstanding. It is quite cold in Massachusetts today and I need to start making soup.
It's really not cool enough here for soup but sometimes I just want to make it. And I do.
DeleteThat sounds like something very good to do. I hope you'll get into it and enjoy it. Did you ever find out what sort of clay you used?
ReplyDeleteOh dear. The clay was not speckled clay. That I know. It was very gray but I think maybe it was called red clay? I'll find out.
DeleteYay Jessie! She got you out of the house, out of your routine, and nobody died. And did you have a good time? It sounds like it. A good day all around.
ReplyDeleteNope. Nobody died.
DeleteYour veggie soup looks delicious ... I'll be making beef stew on Election Day and, maybe, top it with dumplings!!
ReplyDeleteLet us hope with everything we have that dumplings will be in order.
DeleteI have always wanted to learn more about pottery. However, I keep getting side tracked with house build-y stuff. I've got to stop doing that.
ReplyDeleteYep. It is proven that you already know how to build a house!
DeleteNone of we men at the pottery class so no eye candy for the female potters? I hope you keep attending the classes so that one day, in the not too distant future, you will show your blog fans a completed pot that you have proudly made with your own fair and slender hands.
ReplyDeleteThere was a guy there. His name was Larry. He was doing some wheel-work and also what looked to be like organizing and cleaning. I think he may have an arrangement, trading work for time in the studio.
DeleteWell done, Ms. Moon, and VERY well done, Jessie!
ReplyDeleteChris from Boise
All credit to Ms. Jessie.
DeleteIt will get you centered. Think process not product.
ReplyDeleteI have already decided that I am going to play with clay. And have fun with it.
DeleteI hope we get to see a picture of your little bowl. That soup is what I'd call a vegetable stew. That will warm you from the inside when it's cold out.
ReplyDeleteI think of stew as having a sort of gravy while this just has the broth. But it is as thick as stew for sure.
DeleteJessie is obviously a keeper. Who raised her to be so wonderful I wonder. I’ve never worked with a wheel and have only sculpted in clay… 400 years ago. Well done!!!
ReplyDeleteJessie was absolutely born the way she is. I had very little to do with how she's turned out except that we have always spent a great deal of time together. She's been the boss of me since she was about two. Or younger.
DeleteThe teacher asked me yesterday if I had ever done any pottery and I said yes, about a million and a half years ago. That or 400- same-same.
Well done Jessie for getting you out of your comfort zone!!! I'm taking my neighbour to the hospital tomorrow so will be up at 6 am (and feel exactly the way you do about early mornings too). Maybe I will drag her out of her comfort zone and take her to lunch afterwards!
ReplyDeleteOh, I hope you got lunch!
DeleteGood for you. I hope you continue to enjoy it. I left a comment about the gorgeous pocket square you made for Hank. I hope the wedding is lovely and fun.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the pocket square comment! I thought I had answered that.
DeleteI think the wedding will indeed be a fine event. It's been a long time coming.
I took a semester of ceramics in college. I could never get the clay centered on the wheel, just didn't have the strength in my hands to move that wet lump of earth, at least that's what I blamed it on. I was so skinny then, 5' 4" and less than 100 pounds. there's a new clay studio that opened here that gives classes. I'm not interested in making bowls and mugs though. my interest lies in sculpture.
ReplyDeleteYou might like clay as a medium more now than you did before. And this class I'm taking has absolutely no rules about sort of work you want to do.
DeleteIt's surprisingly hard to center clay! That workroom looks so familiar -- like every pottery room I ever worked in. I guess there is necessarily going to be a certain sameness to them all. I can't wait to see your pots!
ReplyDeleteDon't hold your breath, Steve! I kept asking Jessie, "Do we have to fire everything we make?" Would be a waste of glaze for the bowl/pot I just made.
DeletePottery studios are my happy place. You'll find folk there are kind and sharing, willing to help a beginner. You don't have to throw, you can hand build. I'll send you a bowl if you want.
ReplyDeleteOh yes. One can hand build but somehow the wheel fascinates me. I may lose interest in it though. Are you an experience potter? I did find the people in the class very helpful and encouraging.
DeleteIn case you prefer to amybe not become a master potter but like it anyway, have you heard of the British TV series The Great Pottery Throw Down? It's like the bake series where 12 amateur potters work on 2-3 challenges every week. So far so boring but the fun part is the main presenter, a former punk rocker turned potter (famous in the UK) who regularly starts crying when he sees something that moves him, also a very beautiful trans woman is in charge of the firing.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/@TheGreatPotteryThrowDown
Wow! Thank you, Sabine! I just went to that site and it looks awesome. I will be watching at least some of it. How cool!
ReplyDeleteOh, I was going to tell you about the pottery show but Sabine beat me to it. It's great fun and they make all sorts of amazing things.
ReplyDeleteThat sounds like a fun class and I can imagine your whole family getting lovely clay bowls and ornaments and trinkets for Christmas! ;)
Oh, I'm so glad that you did that, and I hope you do again. I think creating things or working with your hands in some way might be the only thing that keeps me sane these days. I love the idea of you and a wheel.
ReplyDelete