January Workshop | 1 hour + Glazing

Longevity Bowl

Join us for this 2-visit* clay workshop!

Let's celebrate winter and create the most charming bowl in this 2-part clay workshop. *Glazing is not included in the building price for all 2-part workshops.

January | Longevity Bowl | 1 Hr Instructor Guided Workshop {member pricing} 1 person for $25, 2 for $35, 3 for $45, 4 for $55

$35.00


{non - members price}

$35 per person


{member pricing}

1 person for $25, 2 for $35, 3 for $45, 4 for $55




(need to be signed in to see member pricing)


Workshop Details

Follow step by step instructions to make your own stoneware clay bowl, ready to bring some joy into your home. In this no-experience needed workshop, enjoy the process as you transform a lump of clay into a functional piece of art.

You’ll be guided through step-by-step how to hand build a lovely bowl and glaze it with colours of your choice when you return. This bowl may become a favourite household item, handmade with care by you!

Timeline

1. Build & Sculpt: 1 hour of instruction, stay up to 30 min after to finesse. Create using our high fire clay and we will dry and fire the clay in the kiln.

2. Glaze: Return to the studio to add the beautiful glazes. Book at least one week after your build date. We recommend booking 1 hour, depending on the amount of detail :)

3. Pick Up: We will fire it again in the kiln. In approximately 10 days after glazing, it’ll be ready for pick up.

Size

8.5" H × 5" D

Techniques & Materials

Techniques: handbuilding, slab building, glazing

Materials: Stoneware clay, underglaze, clear high fire glaze

Stoneware Clay 101

The most important thing to remember when working with clay is to relax and enjoy the process of making hand made art! Clay is like magical mud for creating fantastic pottery and cool ceramics. First, you shape it into whatever you want. Then it has to air dry and go into a super-hot oven called a kiln, where it gets fired at really high temperatures (around 1,200°C!). After it’s been fired once it’s ready for the colourful and clear glazes! Finally. it gets fired again to cure the glazes to the clay. 

“We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give”

—Winston Churchill