regrettably "wild clay" is tainted for me as a local grocery chain uses "wild harvested" as the slogan for their natural foods line. On milk cartons it brings to mind the image of a milk maid brandishing a pail and stool while chasing an auroch through the woods 😁.
My children cheered when I told them, "He made more pots!!!" No questions, no discussion. They knew precisely what I'd meant. Please make more of these videos! We love them.
I happened to be watching a video about Cherokee pottery techniques, and I found something interesting I thought you'd enjoy! Apparently, the Cherokee used to put a corncob inside whatever vessle they were going to cook, and when the cob began to smoke, they knew they could push it into the fire without risk of shock. I'm not sure how well it would work, but it's a neat idea!
I am constantly amazed that you are able to find the time to undertake such an enormously wide range of time-consuming activities: long walks, walking spoons, foraging, cooking, scam-baiting, cost-restricted menus (such as living on £1 a day for several days), weird stuff in cans, etc., etc., the list seems endless. I can't find any satisfactory substitute for the most obvious cliché to describe you: a 21st-century Renaissance man. 👍🏻 I never miss a single one of your videos, and I watch every second of each one, from beginning to end. Many, many thanks for all the wonderful things I have learnt about through your videos. 🙏🏻
I’ve tried to explain to people why I like your videos so much. For me, it’s because you enjoy trying stuff that’s new and different. You’ve broken the mediocrity and routine nature that life can become, and you set yourself challenges and learn. Honestly, you’re an absolute inspiration Sir Shrimp.
Speaking as a person who probably takes themselves far too seriously most of the time... I absolutely love the sense of whimsy and curious discovery you have. I've really enjoyed watching this journey so far, and I look forward to more.
The way you describe working with clay. "Daydreaming with my hands" is my favorite part of the hobby. For me it's about the journey, not the destination
It's the little bits of wisdom that you drop along the way which make you one of my favourite channels, the bit about the scenic method of making things really spoke to me. You've inspired me to get into crafting stuff, amongst other types of projects. Just finished waxing a pair of canvas trousers and a rucksack yesterday.
was up late last night thinking about mr shimp and his pots. glad to see this update today. Im not sure how much longer I could have handled the suspense
It's honestly so lovely to see you experimenting and having fun with it rather than doing the most efficient route, it's how happy accidents are made much like the wobbly leaf pot, excited to see how they turn out!
Wow loving this series, even if they fail I just love your analysis of how you can succeed, I think most want success but you are so grounded that even with failure you take the positive. Keep making videos atomic shrimp you make days dark lighter again
yay you're on the right track. Your ideas for a larger fire and adding more fuel to have enough ashes to protect the pots is spot on. (Toasting the dry pots around a small fire before stacking them for the bon fire can help with too sudden heating.) The technical term you were seeking to describe your fluted pot is "wibbly wobbly". The ingredient you noticed in the unrefined clay that acts plastic but doesn't add strength in the fired or unfired states is probably silt, flour size silica particles. Your observation about grog decreasing plasticity more than a like amount of sand is correct. Grog is greedy for water and will steal it from the clay minerals making them less plastic as well as diluting them. It looks like you're prospering from your work philosophy of learning about pottery from the clay by using the most primitive materials and techniques. 🥇ichiban style.
Really enjoying these videos. I like that you are trying to discover the rules without looking too much at other sources (I'm assuming you did some research but you don't seem to be following a guide) - its sort of like trying to recreate the history of how people worked out how to make pots. I think digging a deeper hole will help, if only to sheild the wind and even out the temperature profile. I like the idea of covering over the pit once the fuel is exhausted so it cools very slowly. Its good you have friends that don't mind you digging holes and setting light to them in their garden!
As partly an artist/maker/teacher of ceramics, that has used home-brew clay like this, I have found this a very interesting series. I used clay from Cambridgeshire where I live, and much of my refining and making process was made a little easier purely because I had access to a pottery studio. It was not easy clay to work with, and I found it suited throwing more than coiling because it did not like being over 1cm thick, or having uneven thickness at all. It also tended to dry in my hands quite quickly, I have hot hands for a potter. (It also melted completely at stoneware temperatures..... but that's another story.... involving a thoroughly ruined kiln shelf.) The Cambridge clay was blue grey in colour before firing, and fired to a toasty yellow orange. If you were going to do much of this, it would be worth casting a/some thick plaster bowl forms to use as moulds instead of glass/wood/metal, because the plaster leaches moisture from the clay, making it quicker and easier to build onto, and the clay drops out of it naturally when its ready to be handled. Also don't be in too much of a rush to make a vessel in one sitting if at all possible, it is perfectly fine to let the clay harden to almost leather hard before adding more coils, at most you may need to score and slip it, but usually just adding water with a brush or sponge and rubbing the surface will wake it up enough to join perfectly. This waiting time to let the clay settle and harden will also make it very much easier for you to get the form and thinner walls you may want, and help stop sagging/flattening and warping of the form as you make it, especially with this type of wild clay. Two tools I can't recommend enough when coiling are: 1. any sort of of turn table. Picking up and moving/handling a wet pot will alter and weaken it's form. 2. A fine toothed serrated tool, preferably kidney shaped, it makes smoothing the coils together on the first pass much quicker, with less pressure, so the form is easier to keep. I also like to use a diagonal upward stroke on the inside and diagonal down on the outer, as it helps to keep the rounded form and adds overall strength. ( a smooth kidney for the refining is also very useful) I also like burnishing with the backs of spoons... purely because they have a handle. lastly, I have found the more regular your coils are when you roll them, the easier it will be to build and finish your pot. It is far easier to control form and thicknesses. Sorry for the novel.... and if any of this was unwanted or already known advice... just my thoughts upon watching your making process.... and was kindly meant.
This is one reason I would love to try something like this; experimentation and failures should be reasons for learning. Learning about why the pots fail after firing can be a good portion of the process.
I do enjoy videos of professionals showing us their craft, but there is something likeable about going through the learning process with you Mike. This is a good series.
If you don't want your clay to dry out like that in storage, you should keep the clay stored in a sealed container with water in the bottom, with the clay elevated above the water. That way it keeps the humidity in the clay. Apparently that's how ancient Chinese potters kept their clay, and the longer it ages like that, the better the clay becomes. I did that with my own wild clay and I think it really improved the plasticity of the clay after I had stored it for several months. As well it was at a perfect hydration level. Good luck with firing this time! I'm really enjoying your clay series
i am loving this series, can't wait for the next episode, i'd say it's my second favourite, my favourite is the scam bating, 3rd is the rambling through the woods
I'm really enjoying this series far more than anticipated. I've never had an interest in pottery before, but knowing all the details and different ways it can be done is so fascinating.
What a wonderful video! I really do enjoy this series, and this meandering path you've chosen is quite relaxing and just good for the soul, if that makes sense? And hey, it even makes for more Atomic Shrimp content, which is always a plus in my book
One thing I love about this series of videos is that helps show exactly how important the evolution of pottery was to human development, something that is often overlooked. I can image an ancient Humanoid going through the same trial and error processes you have gone through.
What's most tantalising to think of is... How did it start? There must have been some breakthrough moment when somebody figured out that heating the clay made it durable
Really enjoying this series. I did a couple 6wk classes at the local clay co-op over the last year and really enjoyed the process. There's something so primitive, simple and creative about creating these clay items with your hands.
14:23 I’m loving your attitude of ~ “Hey, I know what let’s try!” Good times. Well done, sir. Wishes, toward a healthy and happy holidays for you and yours. 🙏 Edit: What I’m trying to convey is: Brilliant. 👍
The wonky pot from before reminded me of a chiton, more specifically a gumboot chiton. When you pick them up, they slowly start to curl up and go all wobbly around the edges like that. But I'm definitely biased by living right next to a beach where they turn up fairly often. Really enjoying this series! :)
Good stuff Mike! I was into pottery when I was younger, and the frustration is real, lol. You can make what you THINK is the perfect piece, but tiny flaws in the clay/heating/cooling can render it useless. You're making great progress, keep at it and don't let failures get to you, I much prefer smithing, as metal is easier for me to "read" and gauge when heating and forging.
I eagerly eagerly await your next video mr shrimp! I go to MIT in Cambridge (US) so I'm vicariously living in nature through your videos! We have a lot of similar interests so any time I watch a video of yours I know I'm in for something I really enjoy! I tried to make bricks with clay in Florida, but dried them in the sun so they cracked a lot. I was about ten so couldn't make a fire. I'm not sure when I'll ever be able to do stuff like this again
I'm an avid viewer of your videos and have to say I get pleased when I see a new upload so thank you for filming all your random shit, I love it, this is really what this platform was for 👊
Still loving this series! I know a few people who are experts at this sort of thing (harvesting, forming, and firing natural clay), but I really am enjoying the not-so-expert experimentation. ❤ Keep 'em coming!
Nothing to do with the video series ( which I am loving ) , but your outro music ( which I also love ) reminds me so much of George Winston ( again love ) who I first learned about with his December album back in 1982 ( not sure if you have heard of him, but do yourself a favor , give a listen to any song from that album, and hopefully, yes, you will love it ) . With lots of Love from HB .
im really looking forward to seeing these pots fired and ready to go!! i do pottery so if the leaf thing works with the plates, then im definitely going to try that. i know that you said that using a kiln is out of the question, but i do think its worth pointing out that you can make a temporary wood kiln that only takes up about a square meter of space. you would need more complicated parts, particularly, then you are using here. excited to see how your pots look!
Very interesting Mr Shrimp. I live in Lancashire in a place called Clayton-Le- Moors. The earth in the garden is very heavy clay in parts and there did used to be clay works and mining in this area. Where I live is a village just outside of Accrington. This is the home of the world famous Accrington Nori brickworks ( now sadly gone). The story goes that these bricks were the hardest bricks available anywhere and they were supposed to to be imprinted with the word "iron" to denote how hard they were. The person who made the imprint mould did it the wrong way round and the result was "NORI" instad of "IRON" and it stuck and for ever more they were known as Accy Nori bricks! I'm not sure if this is true or and urban myth!!
I am quite interested by pottery and All art forms related to it, so I’m very Interested by this video series. If I could double like this video I would!
I wonder what would happen if you got some strips of dried twigs or metal rods and made a lattice from them, which you place the clay around to form your bowl. Maybe if the difference in tension within the clay wall can be mitigated by that, like rebar in concrete, allowing you to get some thicker walls!
Thinking about brick making, there was a time when the Eastleigh area (especially Chandler's Ford) was well known for it. However if you look around today there's scant evidence this was ever the case, except for a few road signs and Allbrook quarry. This made me wonder that if the clay around here isn't much good for pots, then perhaps it isn't much good for bricks or anything else, which is why brick making ceased? Anyway, looking forward to the firing!
Certainly it was good for bricks, as there are lots of old brick buildings around the place. Not sure why brickmaking moved away from the area - might be competition from some area where they had clay *and* coal locally available - down here, the coal to fire them would have been brought in
I just love this. I was watching your scam vids and saw that you do everything. Cooking in a clay pot, the food tastes 💯 better. I've never made them through,so I'll start at 1. ❤️🇦🇺
For such uncooperative clay I think your pots are very good.two other ways you might enjoy making pots are the Japanese technique- kurinuki where you make a solid lump of clay with the external shape you desire let it stiffen to leather hard then hollow it out ,like hollowing a pumpkin for carving.or you might try starting your pot rim first ? Make a coil the size of the rim you want lay it on a little bit of board then build up your pot with a little smaller coil every time ,essentially making a dome.smooth interior and exterior as possible rotating your board as you go as an I provided turntable finally a blob fills the hole in the top like the capping block in an igloo.let t harden a bit then run a sharp blade round the base to release it from the board and refine it to a finish. Have fun
If you make a really thin gravy (boiling water and flour) or add noodle water or excess rice water, it helps add plasticity to the refined clay. That is an old process that was used throughout history.
To be fair, I kind of wish you would have to repeat the first steps quite a bit more, for this excellent series to last longer. Have thorougly enjoyed it so far
Hi Shrimpy have you seen the Primitive Technology channel? Interesting insights into pottery making using the simplest technology possible. Remember to put the closed captions on to find out what is going on. You might find it interesting. Great channel (as is yours of course!) keep them coming.
I'm not entirely sure that this is helpful but I made loads of pots/cups/vases/ash trays as a child. They were all fired in a school kiln. Anyway the point is: I bashed the air out of the clay, a good half an hour of picking up the clay and slamming it down, picking it up slamming it down ad infinitium. Never folding over as that would just add air, just pick up and slam down.
I love the term "wild clay" because it implies feral and domesticated minerals
I prefer to forge my swords from iron that has roamed free
@@oz_jones it's more rich in magnesium and carbon, less copper and aluminum.
@@jwalster9412 a cual pun
regrettably "wild clay" is tainted for me as a local grocery chain uses "wild harvested" as the slogan for their natural foods line. On milk cartons it brings to mind the image of a milk maid brandishing a pail and stool while chasing an auroch through the woods 😁.
it's a conspiracy it's organic and free range being portrayed as wild.
My children cheered when I told them, "He made more pots!!!"
No questions, no discussion. They knew precisely what I'd meant. Please make more of these videos! We love them.
I love this series and it's the same thing I said to my partner! It's 10/10
@@catstify you built like a clay pot
Wholesome
This looks so much like a bot comment, but it's probably not.
@@jwalster9412 you built like a clay pot too
I happened to be watching a video about Cherokee pottery techniques, and I found something interesting I thought you'd enjoy! Apparently, the Cherokee used to put a corncob inside whatever vessle they were going to cook, and when the cob began to smoke, they knew they could push it into the fire without risk of shock. I'm not sure how well it would work, but it's a neat idea!
I am constantly amazed that you are able to find the time to undertake such an enormously wide range of time-consuming activities: long walks, walking spoons, foraging, cooking, scam-baiting, cost-restricted menus (such as living on £1 a day for several days), weird stuff in cans, etc., etc., the list seems endless. I can't find any satisfactory substitute for the most obvious cliché to describe you: a 21st-century Renaissance man. 👍🏻 I never miss a single one of your videos, and I watch every second of each one, from beginning to end. Many, many thanks for all the wonderful things I have learnt about through your videos. 🙏🏻
I’ve tried to explain to people why I like your videos so much. For me, it’s because you enjoy trying stuff that’s new and different. You’ve broken the mediocrity and routine nature that life can become, and you set yourself challenges and learn. Honestly, you’re an absolute inspiration Sir Shrimp.
@@joesender daddy*
For me the channel is a quiet place of sanity and calm. With occasional belly laughs.
I get a grandad vibe who can teach you life skills
Isn't it impossible to put words on it.. I think it's just how relaxed and real he is. We've all forgotten about the simple things
Let’s be real, it’s our autism.
Speaking as a person who probably takes themselves far too seriously most of the time... I absolutely love the sense of whimsy and curious discovery you have. I've really enjoyed watching this journey so far, and I look forward to more.
This is my favorite YT channel. Between your content, your presentation, and your voice/accent, this is the YT equivalent of comfort food
Oh my goodness I can't believe how invested I am in this project! Can't wait for the next episode! Thanks Shrimp
The way you describe working with clay. "Daydreaming with my hands" is my favorite part of the hobby. For me it's about the journey, not the destination
It's the little bits of wisdom that you drop along the way which make you one of my favourite channels, the bit about the scenic method of making things really spoke to me. You've inspired me to get into crafting stuff, amongst other types of projects. Just finished waxing a pair of canvas trousers and a rucksack yesterday.
was up late last night thinking about mr shimp and his pots. glad to see this update today. Im not sure how much longer I could have handled the suspense
Your words at 12:31 - 12:48 resonate with me greatly. This not only goes for pottery or handywork. It is applicable to most if not all professions.
It's honestly so lovely to see you experimenting and having fun with it rather than doing the most efficient route, it's how happy accidents are made much like the wobbly leaf pot, excited to see how they turn out!
The clay pot saga continues!
Wow loving this series, even if they fail I just love your analysis of how you can succeed, I think most want success but you are so grounded that even with failure you take the positive. Keep making videos atomic shrimp you make days dark lighter again
yay you're on the right track.
Your ideas for a larger fire and adding more fuel to have enough ashes to protect the pots is spot on. (Toasting the dry pots around a small fire before stacking them for the bon fire can help with too sudden heating.)
The technical term you were seeking to describe your fluted pot is "wibbly wobbly".
The ingredient you noticed in the unrefined clay that acts plastic but doesn't add strength in the fired or unfired states is probably silt, flour size silica particles.
Your observation about grog decreasing plasticity more than a like amount of sand is correct. Grog is greedy for water and will steal it from the clay minerals making them less plastic as well as diluting them.
It looks like you're prospering from your work philosophy of learning about pottery from the clay by using the most primitive materials and techniques. 🥇ichiban style.
So relaxing and instructive, I love this series !
Really enjoying these videos. I like that you are trying to discover the rules without looking too much at other sources (I'm assuming you did some research but you don't seem to be following a guide) - its sort of like trying to recreate the history of how people worked out how to make pots. I think digging a deeper hole will help, if only to sheild the wind and even out the temperature profile. I like the idea of covering over the pit once the fuel is exhausted so it cools very slowly. Its good you have friends that don't mind you digging holes and setting light to them in their garden!
As partly an artist/maker/teacher of ceramics, that has used home-brew clay like this, I have found this a very interesting series. I used clay from Cambridgeshire where I live, and much of my refining and making process was made a little easier purely because I had access to a pottery studio. It was not easy clay to work with, and I found it suited throwing more than coiling because it did not like being over 1cm thick, or having uneven thickness at all. It also tended to dry in my hands quite quickly, I have hot hands for a potter. (It also melted completely at stoneware temperatures..... but that's another story.... involving a thoroughly ruined kiln shelf.) The Cambridge clay was blue grey in colour before firing, and fired to a toasty yellow orange.
If you were going to do much of this, it would be worth casting a/some thick plaster bowl forms to use as moulds instead of glass/wood/metal, because the plaster leaches moisture from the clay, making it quicker and easier to build onto, and the clay drops out of it naturally when its ready to be handled.
Also don't be in too much of a rush to make a vessel in one sitting if at all possible, it is perfectly fine to let the clay harden to almost leather hard before adding more coils, at most you may need to score and slip it, but usually just adding water with a brush or sponge and rubbing the surface will wake it up enough to join perfectly. This waiting time to let the clay settle and harden will also make it very much easier for you to get the form and thinner walls you may want, and help stop sagging/flattening and warping of the form as you make it, especially with this type of wild clay.
Two tools I can't recommend enough when coiling are: 1. any sort of of turn table. Picking up and moving/handling a wet pot will alter and weaken it's form. 2. A fine toothed serrated tool, preferably kidney shaped, it makes smoothing the coils together on the first pass much quicker, with less pressure, so the form is easier to keep. I also like to use a diagonal upward stroke on the inside and diagonal down on the outer, as it helps to keep the rounded form and adds overall strength. ( a smooth kidney for the refining is also very useful) I also like burnishing with the backs of spoons... purely because they have a handle.
lastly, I have found the more regular your coils are when you roll them, the easier it will be to build and finish your pot. It is far easier to control form and thicknesses.
Sorry for the novel.... and if any of this was unwanted or already known advice... just my thoughts upon watching your making process.... and was kindly meant.
This makes me appreciate the work that goes into the pots you destroy so casually in Zelda games
Really really love this series. More traditional craft series? Natural medicine? Shelter building? Wood whittling?
I love this series. Such a great series to unwind to.
This is one reason I would love to try something like this; experimentation and failures should be reasons for learning. Learning about why the pots fail after firing can be a good portion of the process.
Aww that sweet memory of Steph's pot made my heart smile. I love it that you're inviting your children to join you in your videos.
I do enjoy videos of professionals showing us their craft, but there is something likeable about going through the learning process with you Mike. This is a good series.
If you don't want your clay to dry out like that in storage, you should keep the clay stored in a sealed container with water in the bottom, with the clay elevated above the water. That way it keeps the humidity in the clay. Apparently that's how ancient Chinese potters kept their clay, and the longer it ages like that, the better the clay becomes.
I did that with my own wild clay and I think it really improved the plasticity of the clay after I had stored it for several months. As well it was at a perfect hydration level.
Good luck with firing this time! I'm really enjoying your clay series
i am loving this series, can't wait for the next episode, i'd say it's my second favourite, my favourite is the scam bating, 3rd is the rambling through the woods
I’m so invested in this, I need to know how the ArtiFossil comes out!
Glad to see more of this series! Just wanted to say I love your content!!!
I'm really enjoying this series far more than anticipated. I've never had an interest in pottery before, but knowing all the details and different ways it can be done is so fascinating.
You could read the ingredients of paint to me and I'll still hang on every word. This is a fantastic series!
Very interesting. I saw a program about the clay warriors uncovered in China. They were made by the coil method as well.
I love this series! I'm so intrigued about what the final result will be ☺️
Been waiting for this, good man Shrimpy!
Your ability to face failure with curiosity is inspiring, been enjoying this serious a bunch!
Love these videos! A breath of fresh air.
What a wonderful video! I really do enjoy this series, and this meandering path you've chosen is quite relaxing and just good for the soul, if that makes sense? And hey, it even makes for more Atomic Shrimp content, which is always a plus in my book
One thing I love about this series of videos is that helps show exactly how important the evolution of pottery was to human development, something that is often overlooked. I can image an ancient Humanoid going through the same trial and error processes you have gone through.
What's most tantalising to think of is... How did it start? There must have been some breakthrough moment when somebody figured out that heating the clay made it durable
@@AtomicShrimp Indeed, and we will probably never know.
I am particularly excited about the spherical pot! Looking forward to the next update :)
I've no idea what possesses me to watch your content, but I'm glad I do 😁
Really liked the look of these pots
Def one of my favourite active series that I'm following on the internet atm.
Great new episode of this series
Thank you for these. I'll be trying this in a few weeks myself and you've given me a bit of a head start. You and Andy Ward.
Now this is dedication, Mike.
Soldier on, you'll get there in the end. 👍
I love the random thoughts and attempts along the way.
Really enjoying this series. I did a couple 6wk classes at the local clay co-op over the last year and really enjoyed the process. There's something so primitive, simple and creative about creating these clay items with your hands.
14:23 I’m loving your attitude of ~ “Hey, I know what let’s try!” Good times.
Well done, sir. Wishes, toward a healthy and happy holidays for you and yours. 🙏
Edit: What I’m trying to convey is: Brilliant. 👍
The wonky pot from before reminded me of a chiton, more specifically a gumboot chiton. When you pick them up, they slowly start to curl up and go all wobbly around the edges like that. But I'm definitely biased by living right next to a beach where they turn up fairly often.
Really enjoying this series! :)
Good stuff Mike! I was into pottery when I was younger, and the frustration is real, lol. You can make what you THINK is the perfect piece, but tiny flaws in the clay/heating/cooling can render it useless. You're making great progress, keep at it and don't let failures get to you, I much prefer smithing, as metal is easier for me to "read" and gauge when heating and forging.
the round one you made at the end is by far my favourite one too. It has such a medieval feel to it. Makes me wanna make my own.
I eagerly eagerly await your next video mr shrimp! I go to MIT in Cambridge (US) so I'm vicariously living in nature through your videos! We have a lot of similar interests so any time I watch a video of yours I know I'm in for something I really enjoy!
I tried to make bricks with clay in Florida, but dried them in the sun so they cracked a lot. I was about ten so couldn't make a fire. I'm not sure when I'll ever be able to do stuff like this again
Such an inspiration! Yes, 18:00 i like that pot shape too
I'm an avid viewer of your videos and have to say I get pleased when I see a new upload so thank you for filming all your random shit, I love it, this is really what this platform was for 👊
Still loving this series! I know a few people who are experts at this sort of thing (harvesting, forming, and firing natural clay), but I really am enjoying the not-so-expert experimentation. ❤
Keep 'em coming!
Nothing to do with the video series ( which I am loving ) , but your outro music ( which I also love ) reminds me so much of George Winston ( again love ) who I first learned about with his December album back in 1982 ( not sure if you have heard of him, but do yourself a favor , give a listen to any song from that album, and hopefully, yes, you will love it ) . With lots of Love from HB .
Take a backup of the pots. If the firing fails again, you can always do a roll-back to version 2.5 or maybe 2.4.
Good job Mr Shrimp. Looking forward to how they turn out. The wavy pot is my favourite however I think that will end up in pieces after firing.
I love the non-food videos you make Shrimp, your library of videos is so diverse. Keep em coming
im really looking forward to seeing these pots fired and ready to go!! i do pottery so if the leaf thing works with the plates, then im definitely going to try that. i know that you said that using a kiln is out of the question, but i do think its worth pointing out that you can make a temporary wood kiln that only takes up about a square meter of space. you would need more complicated parts, particularly, then you are using here. excited to see how your pots look!
You have the patience of a saint. I need to learn to be more like you. Take in the experience.
the round pot looks lovely
Ooooh, cooking with clay! So really interesting. ALL your videos fly by! Thank you from Herefordshire.
I never knew waiting for pot making videos could fill me with such suspense XD. Looking forward to seeing the firing
Very interesting Mr Shrimp. I live in Lancashire in a place called Clayton-Le- Moors. The earth in the garden is very heavy clay in parts and there did used to be clay works and mining in this area. Where I live is a village just outside of Accrington. This is the home of the world famous Accrington Nori brickworks ( now sadly gone). The story goes that these bricks were the hardest bricks available anywhere and they were supposed to to be imprinted with the word "iron" to denote how hard they were. The person who made the imprint mould did it the wrong way round and the result was "NORI" instad of "IRON" and it stuck and for ever more they were known as Accy Nori bricks! I'm not sure if this is true or and urban myth!!
Perfect to watch when winding down for the night
"Unviably floppy" Don't worry, it happens to us all.
I really enjoy most of your videos. I am really enjoying this series. thank you!
Loving this series. Long may it continue!
The first pot looks like a forbidden Easter egg
This is such a therapeutic series! Thank you so much for sharing it.
Even though it had issues to make, the last spherical piece is my favourite too. Good luck again 👍
6:27
HELLO GORDON!
surely I'm not the only one who's neurons flared up at that quote
More drama and thrill here than any stream media series.
I love it.
really enjoying this pottery series!
I'm loving this series, it has a real Primitive Technology vibe to it
I'm really loving this series :D
It'll be exciting to see how they all turn out!
I'm loving this new series 😍
Can't wait to see the results!
I am quite interested by pottery and
All art forms related to it, so I’m very
Interested by this video series.
If I could double like this video I would!
How am I so emotionally invested in a bunch of pots??
I wonder what would happen if you got some strips of dried twigs or metal rods and made a lattice from them, which you place the clay around to form your bowl. Maybe if the difference in tension within the clay wall can be mitigated by that, like rebar in concrete, allowing you to get some thicker walls!
Your pots are looking better and better, lovely job!
Thinking about brick making, there was a time when the Eastleigh area (especially Chandler's Ford) was well known for it. However if you look around today there's scant evidence this was ever the case, except for a few road signs and Allbrook quarry. This made me wonder that if the clay around here isn't much good for pots, then perhaps it isn't much good for bricks or anything else, which is why brick making ceased?
Anyway, looking forward to the firing!
Certainly it was good for bricks, as there are lots of old brick buildings around the place. Not sure why brickmaking moved away from the area - might be competition from some area where they had clay *and* coal locally available - down here, the coal to fire them would have been brought in
Really enjoying this series
fascinating as always ! Never stop please !!!!!
You have no idea how excited I am to see these pots cook something
I just love this. I was watching your scam vids and saw that you do everything. Cooking in a clay pot, the food tastes 💯 better. I've never made them through,so I'll start at 1. ❤️🇦🇺
I'm excited to see if the quirky quiche pot makes it!
For such uncooperative clay I think your pots are very good.two other ways you might enjoy making pots are the Japanese technique- kurinuki where you make a solid lump of clay with the external shape you desire let it stiffen to leather hard then hollow it out ,like hollowing a pumpkin for carving.or you might try starting your pot rim first ? Make a coil the size of the rim you want lay it on a little bit of board then build up your pot with a little smaller coil every time ,essentially making a dome.smooth interior and exterior as possible rotating your board as you go as an I provided turntable finally a blob fills the hole in the top like the capping block in an igloo.let t harden a bit then run a sharp blade round the base to release it from the board and refine it to a finish. Have fun
With all of your work with this project I hope you get a pot that does the trick.
If you make a really thin gravy (boiling water and flour) or add noodle water or excess rice water, it helps add plasticity to the refined clay. That is an old process that was used throughout history.
Love your videos this series may be life saving info , keep up the great work…peace
To be fair, I kind of wish you would have to repeat the first steps quite a bit more, for this excellent series to last longer. Have thorougly enjoyed it so far
I'm really enjoying these videos, it's nice to watch others working. 🙂👍
Hi Shrimpy have you seen the Primitive Technology channel? Interesting insights into pottery making using the simplest technology possible. Remember to put the closed captions on to find out what is going on. You might find it interesting. Great channel (as is yours of course!) keep them coming.
Just watched it. Really good
Excited, thank you shrimp
I don't usually watch your content other than scambaiting, but I've been enjoying this series quite a lot.
I'm not entirely sure that this is helpful but I made loads of pots/cups/vases/ash trays as a child. They were all fired in a school kiln. Anyway the point is: I bashed the air out of the clay, a good half an hour of picking up the clay and slamming it down, picking it up slamming it down ad infinitium. Never folding over as that would just add air, just pick up and slam down.