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Text-only Version

Planter. Approx 32x32cm.

Janet Adam

material

Stoneware

technique

Thrown

firing method

Electric

Janet Adam's wheelthrown stoneware and porcelain covers a wide scale of form, size and function. A small range of traditional domestic ware is included alongside more decorative yet functional pieces. Delicate porcelain bowls and vases, abstract-patterned wall-plates, plant and flower containers, jugs and large pitchers are all made as "one-off" items. Frost-proof garden urns and planters are on a larger scale. The high-fired reduction glazes give colourful, individual results, making each piece a unique object. Commissions are welcomed. Located at 76 Henderson Row, Edinburgh, EH3 5BT, we are open all year round and there is no admission charge. Prices range from £5 to £750

Other photographs: Jug. Ht 35cm.

e-mail address

none

website address

www.adampottery.co.uk

Stoneware bowl

Jane Barker

material

Other

technique

Thrown

firing method

Gas-fired

All work is thrown stoneware or porcelain, reduction fired to 1280C in a self-built propane gas kiln. Glazes are celadons, picking up incising on porcelain, and tenmoku. Currently, I am using black and white slips, inlay and scraffitto, glaze reserved for interiors, and adding colour and textural contrasts to the matt and semi-matt finishes of the clay and slip.

Address:
"Courtin"
Barthol Chapel
Inverurie
Aberdeenshire AB51 8TD

Photographs:

1. Stoneware bowl 12" diameter. Black and white slips. scraffitto.

2. Stoneware bottle vases, 9 1/2", 8" and 6 1/2" high. Black and white slips, scraffitto.

3. Porcelain ovaled forms 7 1/2" and 5 1/2" high. Black slips, scraffitto inlay, paper resist and inlaid glaze.

Other photographs: Stoneware bottle vases, Porcelain ovaled forms

e-mail address

r.n.barker@abdn.ac.uk

Bath Series Pot

Ian Beamish

material

Earthenware

technique

Other

firing method

Electric

The House Pottery is run by Fife based potter Ian Beamish. He designs and makes pots and plaques with an architectural theme. All are carefully handmade using a combination of press moulding and modelling techniques using best quality clays and materials. Each pot and plaque is painted by hand using a combination of oxide/carbonate washes and vitrifying colours.

Ian produces unique pots and plaques that make excellent gifts for those seeking to give something original as a present. You will find items suitable for the home and garden.

The House Pottery is a private enterprise not a commercial business but his work is produced to professional standards and customers will enjoy a high quality of personal service.

Ian studied ceramics in the 1970s and then, as now, his inspiration comes from the built environment. Many pieces reflect his fascination with derelict and dilapidated buildings. Ian’s house pots frequently remind people of buildings they have known and loved themselves not just in recognisable physical appearance, but because the character and spirit of those places has been portrayed.

Other photographs: Salford Series Pot, London Series Pot

e-mail address

ian@thehousepottery.com

website address

www.thehousepottery.com

Blue grass tableware

Alison Borthwick

material

Porcelain

technique

Other

firing method

Electric

Alison Borthwick studied ceramics and printmaking at Grays School of Art in Aberdeen fron 1978-82. She returned to Glasgow to set up her pottery full time in 1983. Here she designed and built up a wide range of porcelain giftware, tableware and luminous lamps before moving the workshop and opening the Pottery Shop in the picturesque village of Buchlyvie near Loch Lomond and the Trossachs.
Alison herself creates the plaster models and moulds from which the products originate. Each new piece is hand turned on a lathe or wheel and polished until like marble. Case and working moulds are then made and dried before ready for use. Items are slipcast, fettled and sponged. After the bisque firing the pieces are wet polished or glazed before the decoration is applied.
Using a variety of techniques, largely inspired by Japanese painting and brushstrokes plus sensitive but striking use of colour, each piece is painted by hand then fired to a final temperature of 1270 C producing the unique and translucent finish.

As well as doing highly detailed work for artist Christine Borland, we now produce a very successful range of blue and white tableware, quirky handbuit dishes, wall fish, commemorative pieces and beautifully painted tile panels.
The shop and workshop are open plan allowing the customer the opportunity to meet the potters and watch them work (mixed blessing!)
We also stock ranges of pottery from some of the best makers in Britain and Ireland. Plus handmade silver jewellery and designer cards to complete the gift!

e-mail address

alisonborthwick@btinternet.com

website address

www.buchlyviepotteryshop.com

forest light platter

Val Burns

material

Stoneware

technique

Other

firing method

Other

Val handbuilds large pots for the home environment - such as platters, vases and planters - many of which feature laminated clay in the design. Made to be strong yet light in weight, the pots are decorated with slips (often copper, iron or manganese) and finished with a matt crystalline glaze. The decoration of this work is much influenced by echoes of the natural environment and the subtle effects of camouflage.

Throwing on the wheel in Culross Pottery’s workshop space, Val also makes a range of stoneware vessels, preferring shapes with clean lines, simply glazed in cool modern colours. These include a variety of mugs and jugs, with dishes, bowls and vases.
Val’s latest work is available at Culross Pottery & Gallery in Fife, and she regularly exhibits at other galleries in Fife and around the Edinburgh area.

Other photographs: shadow planter, seashore vase - thrown

e-mail address

val_burns@madasafish.com

website address

www.culrosspottery.com

stoneware ovolo

tom butcher

material

Stoneware

technique

Sculpted

firing method

Gas-fired

Various forms of living and natural matter inspire Tom Butcher’s work. The sculptural forms he creates represent an abstracted interpretation of research into organic growth and forms: from the architecture of insects to gneiss rock found on the North West Coast of Scotland. Tom employs several innovative processes to produce pieces of varying proportion and fragility, in an effort to push the boundaries of traditional ceramic making techniques.

Tom’s studio is on the shores of Loch Long, Scotland, surrounded by the inspirational scenery of the Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park.

In his range of ‘Convoluted Bowls’, Tom uses a variety of clay bodies and base materials to produce a number of textures and finishes, from the purity and delicate nature of porcelain and bone china, to the gritty coarseness of heavily grogged crank and t-material. He has taken the textural, linear qualities of wool, rope and twines, and used them to describe the surface of his forms. Tom has also experimented with the inherent colours of various clays to produce a series of tonal monochromatic pieces. The colours used are fundamentally derived from those found in nature.

The ‘Monolith’ range was initially inspired by the architecture of , as well as gneiss – a granite-like rock specific to the coast of Sutherland, Scotland. Tom has refined and abstracted these forms to create subtle and delicate monolithic objects. The ‘monlithic’ pieces are hand built using a variety of stoneware clays and porcelain, hand polished or glazed , and reduction fired.

Other photographs: reduction fired monolith, set of three convoluted crank bowls

e-mail address

enquiries@mansefieldstudios.com

website address

www.mansefieldstudios.com

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