But overall, this one does not make me despair. Even if it does not look exactly like a hibiscus, it certainly has hibiscus energy.
Pottery was good. Lizzie and I got to do a lot of talking and there was chatting with others too. I thanked the woman who suggested the puzzle board profusely and when she told me about the puzzle she's been working on for quite awhile I was gobsmacked. First of all- 2000 pieces. Secondly...well, I simply could not do it. I am in awe of her for even opening the box on it.
I took an elephant ear leaf into class this morning with the idea of making a platter using it as a pattern and to impress its markings onto the clay.
Hmmm...
That didn't really take a great deal of time once I got the slab rolled out for the piece and smoothed over. There is such a thing as a slab roller and that is my favorite piece of equipment in the studio. Do not ask me why. It looks like this.
I believe that just turning that wheel and feeling the force being created to press that clay down thrills me. Plus, I always feel a little bit like I'm the captain of a boat of old and that is my ship's wheel. At least for the 24 seconds it takes to operate the thing.
So I did get the leaf cut and impressed onto the clay and remembered almost at the end of class that I needed to add a base to it. You can't fire a piece that is glazed where the piece meets the kiln or really, really bad things will happen.
Ask me how I know.
So anyway, I did that.
It almost felt like cheating to form and build the platter because my flower bowls take forever. There is so much manipulation and speculation and contemplation and frequently frustration involved.
Anyway, I draped it over a shallow, long oval mold so that it will hopefully dry in that shape. A hump mold. Not to be confused with a slump mold.
And then I made another slab, giving myself a reason to use the slab roller again. I cut another fish from this one. A quite large one, rather round in shape. Another fish bowl?
Quite likely. I didn't get this one finished and I just realized a very, very ridiculously stupid mistake I made when I wrapped it up and left it until next week. Hopefully, the clay will still be moist enough to do what I need to do with it. And if it's not?
La-di-dah.
Another lesson!
So that was all good, or rather, somewhat productive, maybe, with a lot of luck. And then I went to Publix and then I took myself to lunch where I got the exact wrong thing because I felt rushed but once again I must say, La-di-dah.
I went to the very nice little resale store next door to the restaurant and although I did not buy anything, I found two objects worthy of, if not lust, than at least admiration.
Look at that beautiful piece of American technology. I believe it is from the late 1800's and I also think it's a hand-treadle operated machine rather than a foot-operated one. As you can see, the machine has been set up with fabric and thread so that you can try it for yourself which I did and was blown away by the smoothness of the movement, the sweet, solid feel of it. Would you look at that decoration? Oh for the days when it was deemed only appropriate for a woman's tools to be beautiful as well as functional.
Am I romanticizing a bygone era just because it's bygone?
Possibly.
And possibly not.
I did not buy it.
Here's the other thing I did not buy.
A merry-go-round horse. I have always wanted a merry-go-round horse of my own. Sorry about the picture but as you can see, there is a lot going on there and besides that, a cabinet was directly behind it, possibly only three feet away and there was no way to get a direct photo of it and I did the best I could.
I checked for a price, of course, but it said, "Price coming," which could be, I suppose, to give them time to research it. It does not look old to me unless it has gotten a new tail, saddle, saddle blanket, stirrups, and harnesses.
But my, it's a handsome steed. I wish you could really, really see it.
Sometimes, too much is simply too much despite what Waldo Sexton, my decor and decorating inspiration and guru said.
No wonder my house looks the way it does.
Off to make supper.
Love...Ms. Moon
P.S. Thank you all SO much for the book and author suggestions. Obviously, we are a readers' community here and nothing could make me happier.
Sharing is caring. Thanks for caring.





well....imo that hibiscus is pretty darned nice! It does (my opinion only) lack that super vibrant *yellow red- yellow purple, orange magenta * center that is so much a part of them but wow.....all else..it's gorgeous! Stunned at how far you have come! And that Singer sewing machine? A think of beauty...... indeed
ReplyDeleteSusan M
You should google "hibiscus" and look at images there.They come in virtually every color and arrangement of colors. Unbelievable.
DeleteYou're right about the old Singer.
Wow! I love that hibiscus! That sewing machine decoration is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteXoxo
Barbara
Isn't it beautiful? Surely nothing like the sewing machines we use today.
DeleteThat does indeed have hibiscus energy and many varieties here don't have the purple centre so consider it an Aussie hibiscus! The sewing machine may well have followed me home if I had seen it but where to put it? Behind the couch with the vintage knitting machine, probably! Hopefully the horse will be priced reasonable and can follow you home because you need it.
ReplyDeleteNo, I'm not saying that all hibiscus have purple centers. Far from it. That's just what I was aiming for there. But I am not unhappy with it at all.
DeleteYou have a vintage knitting machine? You should take a picture and post it sometime.
Your hibiscus is lovely. It might now have achieved the colors you intended but the red is quite nice. I know nothing about pottery and color but how do you choose the paint to achieve the color you want?
ReplyDeleteIs it all trial and error?
My mother's Aunt Natalie had a sewing machine just like the one in your photo. It had the same floral decoration and Auntie considered it her prized possession.
It's not all trial and error. Well, a lot of it certainly is. You can go online and google the brand and color of glaze you're using to see what the color is. Or at least a relatively close match. I did some mixing of colors to try for a burgundy center but that simply did not work, or at least the way I did it did not.
DeleteHurray for Aunt Natalie!
I am also disappointed there wasn't purple in the hibiscus and hope you get it worked out next time. The sewing machine is so beautiful and if I had space I would have bought that. There is one thing in the horse picture that I would have bought even if I didn't have space for it. I would MAKE space for a floor/table standing globe of the earth! I have wanted one of those my whole life, since I saw one in the living room of a very old friend of my mother's, when I was about five.
ReplyDeleteRiver, I wish I could have bought it for you.
DeleteThe hibiscus is very successful. And those old sewing machines are lovely.
ReplyDeleteAnd when I tried the machine out, turned that wheel, it was as smooth as the day it left the factory, I bet you anything.
DeleteI LOVE your hibiscus just the way it is!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Laura.
DeleteWhat a long way you have come! I think your plate turned out nicely. I gave one of those old Singers (foot treadle) to Mattie. It had beautiful decoration on it. Levi was thinking that perhaps they should paint over it. I am pleased to say that they did not do this.
ReplyDeleteWhen I compare some of the other flower bowls I've made to the hibiscus, it is rather startling at how much more sophisticated this one is. Night and day.
DeleteAs long as I live I will never understand why a religion would think that something is too ornamental to have in use. I mean, I get that they have their own reasons but I would not want to have anything to do with a god that made such demands.
You were mighty good to give that sewing machine to Mattie. I bet she loves it so much.
I think your Hibiscus platter is beautiful! I would be proud had I made it. Well done!
ReplyDeleteAfter having taken a step back from getting the hibiscus out of the kiln, I am liking it more and more.
DeleteI like that old sewing machine very much but just what I don't need is more "stuff" cluttering up my house that I'm gonna give to charity next year anyway! The merry-go-round horse not so much but maybe in the garden somewhere! On the other hand I really do love your hibiscus. It's truly beautiful!
ReplyDeleteI hear you, honey. Sometimes I just tell myself that whatever it is I'm sort of wish I owned will be found and loved by another and it will make them so happy.
DeleteYeah. The horse? Not so much. Now one of those fancy, wooden, painted ones? I might figure out room.
Thank you for your sweet words about the hibiscus.
My first thought when I saw your hibiscus was: "wow, that's stunning". It's art, an interpretation of reality, not a duplication. Some 40-odd years ago I had a sewing machine like that one, not as decorated though. I can't recall what happened to it.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
DeleteI do the same thing as you, looking back and remembering things I used to own and wondering what the hell happened to them. Where did that thing go?
The hibiscus plate is stunning. And if we hadn’t read about your efforts to mix glazes with hopes of deep red purples, we wouldn’t know that you had other intentions than this beauty with red and white happening all over. It still says hibiscus, and I’ve seen white blooms with the red edges! Yes indeed, glazes just need tests so we have some idea what they might produce, but that takes a lot of time being fired and noted which ones are which. They are based on chemicals and just don’t react like paints at all. You might try underglazes which are like slips and come out looking more like what you paint. Have a great Thursday!
ReplyDeleteI have indeed used underglazes before and I like them very much. There is so much I don't know and never will, but it's really a thrill to start to feel a little more trust and belief in what I'm doing.
DeleteI love how your hibiscus plate turned out! Beautiful colours and a gorgeous glossy finish!
ReplyDeleteI do love a glossy finish! Matte? Eh, not so much.
DeleteI absolutely love your hibiscus plate! I'd put that in my house in a heartbeat!
ReplyDeleteReally Jennifer? That is so sweet.
DeleteThe hibiscus plate is beautiful. I really like how it turned out.
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty happy with it myself.
DeleteI really like the hibiscus plate, as well! At first glance, it likes quite crystalline!
ReplyDeleteThose stroke and coat paints are very shiny after firing. Which I like.
DeleteI love that hibiscus plate Mary and would absolutely put that on display in my home in a heartbeat. I very much agree with Waldo but am beginning to wonder just how much more stuff I can hang on the walls. My very dear but rather too outspoken Mother used to walk through my house and say; "You got a lot of shit in here Camille". My reply: "Yea Ma, so just close your eyes and keep moving". X
ReplyDeleteOh my god. Your story about your mother made me laugh. That sounds so much like something I'd say only maybe not? But hell, speak the truth and shame the devil, right?
DeleteHer truth, anyway. Not your truth or her house so...
Didn't Hank once say you'd never debate what to do with something because you'd just hang it on the wall? I'm not remembering the exact quote but I thought it was pretty funny.
ReplyDeleteYour elephant ear bowl sounds intriguing -- a good idea to use a real leaf. I have a big round platter made by pressing some old fabric into clay, and I bet the potter used a machine just like that. I never knew what it might have looked like.
It was when Lily sent the group a picture of something she'd seen and wanted but didn't know what she'd do with and Hank responded, "Have you learned nothing from our mother? Hang it on the wall!"
DeleteI didn't use the roller to make the plant impression, but a rolling pin instead. I didn't even think about using the slab roller!
So I have a question. The pottery session you attend is called a class, right? There is a leader/teacher there on site to help/guide people in their endeavors. If you had asked her, would she have told you which glazes to use achieve the purple color you wanted? Or did Missy Stubborn Pants say to herself - "I can do it ALL myself - don't need any old teacher.....?
ReplyDeleteMmmm...
DeleteThat's a good question. It would have been hard for me to describe the colors I was going for. Plus, due to the nature of the type of glaze I was using, I'm not sure anyone could have given me a definite answer on that. And I'm not sure it's stubbornness that prevented me from asking or simply the desire to see what happened when I experimented.
No need to describe the shades you want. Buy a set of coloured pencils with multiple shades of each colour and use those to show your teacher what colour you are aiming for. I did that with buying the paint I used on various furniture pieces. I also discovered that one particular colour looks a deeper green/blue when used on unfinished wood, and a lighter more Caribbean blue when a white undercoat/primer is used . Colour is so interesting. I imagine different types of wood might result in even more shades from that same can of paint which sadly is now empty.
DeleteYour hibiscus dish is lovely. My husband asked if you are selling your pieces. He thinks it’s that good! Hugs, Elaine
ReplyDeleteWhoa! Thank you for telling me that, Elaine! And thank your husband for me too, please. I really appreciate that.
DeleteIts a mighty fine hibiscus!
ReplyDeleteI once won a cooking competition (it was a work one so not too high stakes) with a tomato tart - one trick that I learned for that one event was for a good crisp bottom, put 1/4 cup grated cheese across the base when it comes out from the blind bake and stick it back in the oven for a few minutes and they were right.
I live in a very dusty part of the world, and the more stuff the more dust that can hide, which profoundly affects my decorating!
Yes! I have seen that suggestion to use grated cheese on the bottom to prevent sogginess. I will try that next time!
DeletePlease. Let us not discuss the amount of dust that I am sure could be collected in my house. Bushels. At least.
Wouldn't have been able to resist that sewing machine! and I defininetly don't need another one!
ReplyDeleteHow many do you have, Mary?
DeleteYour hibiscus platter is absolutely beautiful! The sewing machine would be hard to pass up. It’s a work of art. I always wanted a vintage carousel horse but never even shopped for one. Then a friend of ours bought one and I was obsessed with it.
ReplyDelete