OK, the title is just symbolic: I have had another blog at BlogSpot called Barb's Pots, where I showed images of stuff I was doing. After cleaning off my old computer (putting images onto a flash drive) I discovered that almost all the images in the blog were gone. Since I'm not making pots anymore, I decided to abandon that blog anyway rather than try to recover it. The following blog is an "uff-da" attempt to recover what little there was left in that blog and "dump" it here.
Here is the post from Oct. 2012 that still had images. It was my latest & last post there--
Just a quick hello--after nearly two years of restoring a house bought on foreclosure as my all-consuming art project.
I joined the Clay Studio of Green Valley, Arizona, to get my hands back into the sticky stuff. I started by enrolling in a sculpture class--never was in one before. Unfortunately the teacher broke her hip shortly before the class, so no instruction. However, some experienced students volunteered to man the room during the class time, and have been helpful steering us towards whatever goal we want.
So, here is what I did in two class sessions. She doesn't have a name yet, is about a foot tall, and I plan to bisque her and apply a low-fire crackle matte white glaze as a test of that glaze for a larger piece I have in mind.
Here is the post from Oct. 2012 that still had images. It was my latest & last post there--
Just a quick hello--after nearly two years of restoring a house bought on foreclosure as my all-consuming art project.
I joined the Clay Studio of Green Valley, Arizona, to get my hands back into the sticky stuff. I started by enrolling in a sculpture class--never was in one before. Unfortunately the teacher broke her hip shortly before the class, so no instruction. However, some experienced students volunteered to man the room during the class time, and have been helpful steering us towards whatever goal we want.
So, here is what I did in two class sessions. She doesn't have a name yet, is about a foot tall, and I plan to bisque her and apply a low-fire crackle matte white glaze as a test of that glaze for a larger piece I have in mind.
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