You could try making a large silicone mold of your final pattern on clay, then you would not have to remake the patterns each time! I love your work and your videos!!! Thank you for sharing!!!
This is incredible, and, I just so happen to have a roll of this rubber!!! I definitely see stamp making in my immediate future! Thank you for the inspiration!
you two are so clever and creative! here i go, butting in again: the small square one you called a geometric leaf pattern...could you use that modified herring bone pattern to create the inside of an elliptical shape (football shape) for a leaf template? you could add twigs freehand, and maybe cut out a few elliptical leaves and glue them to a mug/vase with slip.
@@annruel9142 : i am artistic, better at 2 dimensional art than 3 dimensional art. i am retired and on a fixed (AKA "mininal") income, so i don't know that i could afford to go to a pottery and create things. what little pottery i did, i did in high school. i think i'd still enjoy it, but don't know that i could afford it. *:-)*
Another creative idea with bonus instructions! Question: I noticed that in this video (and Part 1) you have not used a release material to prevent the wet clay from sticking to your texture; did you the mat with a release off camera? Or does the clay really NOT stick to the rubber texture?? Thank you so much for sharing your time and expertise.
We had little problem with sticking...the only issue was when we try and pull it off patterns that run in various directions...the grain of the pattern tends to pull against each other and wants to tear the clay. No Pam, no Vaseline, no problem. Rubber, it’s not just for breakfast anymore.
Don’t think the mats are flexible enough to get it to cover the thrown piece evenly. We may try and experiment with another material that might work...back to the lab!😀
When we get the pottery all glazed and finished we will post them to the "Community" section of the Little Street Pottery Channel. Stay tuned!
A rotary cutter works great. Also a quilting cutting mat and clear ruler. Thank you for these great videos! Love them!!
Amazing patterns. TY for sharing. Can't wait to see the finished pieces.
Love the Y pattern!
You could try making a large silicone mold of your final pattern on clay, then you would not have to remake the patterns each time! I love your work and your videos!!! Thank you for sharing!!!
That is a great idea Hagay. Thanks for that. :-)
I would like to see how you do the bottoms. I love 😍 your clever ideas with the mat.
I can’t find a mat but I am still on the hunt. These are such great ideas! I absolutely LOVE your channel!!
Hey Michele...there’s a link in the description if you want to buy from Amazon...thanks for watching!
This is incredible, and, I just so happen to have a roll of this rubber!!! I definitely see stamp making in my immediate future! Thank you for the inspiration!
Would love to see your ideas!
Amazing ideas!! Thank you for sharing. I really enjoy all your videos
Thanks Carolyn!
Loved the Y shape. Are you selling any of the shapes?
Hi Cindy. I hadnt thought of selling these but now perhaps I should give it some thought :-)
you two are so clever and creative! here i go, butting in again: the small square one you called a geometric leaf pattern...could you use that modified herring bone pattern to create the inside of an elliptical shape (football shape) for a leaf template? you could add twigs freehand, and maybe cut out a few elliptical leaves and glue them to a mug/vase with slip.
Sounds like you are creative yourself. I havent tried that. You will have to give it a try and let ME know :-)
@@annruel9142 : i am artistic, better at 2 dimensional art than 3 dimensional art. i am retired and on a fixed (AKA "mininal") income, so i don't know that i could afford to go to a pottery and create things. what little pottery i did, i did in high school. i think i'd still enjoy it, but don't know that i could afford it. *:-)*
Another creative idea with bonus instructions! Question: I noticed that in this video (and Part 1) you have not used a release material to prevent the wet clay from sticking to your texture; did you the mat with a release off camera? Or does the clay really NOT stick to the rubber texture?? Thank you so much for sharing your time and expertise.
We had little problem with sticking...the only issue was when we try and pull it off patterns that run in various directions...the grain of the pattern tends to pull against each other and wants to tear the clay. No Pam, no Vaseline, no problem. Rubber, it’s not just for breakfast anymore.
@@LittleStreetPottery .....👍
Hi. Love this- can you stamp onto thrown pieces? What would be the trick to it?
Don’t think the mats are flexible enough to get it to cover the thrown piece evenly. We may try and experiment with another material that might work...back to the lab!😀
So creative with awesome results!
I just love the stamps you've made and the images created. Beautiful! I just don't trust myself to be sawing wood and cutting thick rubber or plastic.
Hi Sherry. to be honest I am more proficient with scissors than a utility knife so I used scissors if that makes it any less dangerous, haha
@@annruel9142 Good idea!
Wah 🥰 keren sahabat ku 🙏👋🇮🇩
Thank you so much :-)
❤