Posts Categorized: News

Motivation and a Failed Challenge!

I tried my best to meet the by know famous ‘12(pots) by 12(noon)‘ challenge. I also failed two days running, but it was interesting to note the added urgency gained by just promising myself that I’d try. Then I thought of ways to circumvent the rules!!!…include a clock in the photo but set the time… Read more »

Making a Mint

   I’m slowly making my way back into throwing on the wheel and it has made Michael Kline’s challenge all the more relevant. We often talk about the rhythm of making pots, but sometimes getting underway is more like trying to start a car that’s been sitting for a long time, sputtering and stuttering along. … Read more »

Contest Results-Snow, (again!)-and a Cool Coiled Pot

Having a contest is a rather shameless way to generate comments, but I’ve been known to be shameless more often than is fair to tell.  Thanks to everyone who took the time to enter! Even if you didn’t mean to. I’ve learned a couple of things about holding a contest : *Two weeks is w-a-a-a-y… Read more »

Contest Update

    Sunday is the big prize drawing for my January contest. A number of you have figured out the unpublished rules (it ain’t rocket science!) and you are welcome to vote early and often.     I’m farm sitting this week as I finish off the last of my ‘Bedrock’ sculptures. Hoping to get snowed in… Read more »

Cera-Money

I’ve been thinking of making LibertyTown money for some time and I roughed out a prototype the other day. I carved into a blank I made out of my fine white stoneware. I let the clay get entirely dry before I begin. I want to make different denominations in different sizes and use them as… Read more »

Tests and Tiles

I’m using two slips these days, one with 6-tile(a N.C. kaolin) as it’s base and one with a French kaolin. I like them both, one being thicker and paler, the other a thinner, orangier skin. But I need to use a different clay for each because of problems with fit. I hate wasting tests on… Read more »

Birthday Contest!

Born in ’55, today I turn 55 myself! I don’t need any presents, believe me, as just being healthy and back in the studio is all a man could wish for. And, of course, the whole world has been taking care of me and bringing me treats for months now. I’m not sure I can… Read more »

The Wm. Kelly Young Collection

Check out this amazing online catalog/collection of American Redware and Stoneware.Click on ‘Featured Lots’ and feast your eyes. Thanks to Jerry Brent for the heads up!Detail of stamp19th c. Harvest Jug (not to be confused with the Harvest Jugs that inspire Doug Fitch!)Thought to be a pot by ‘Dave the Slave’I like flasks (for their… Read more »

Customer Queries

Dr. Mike Costa got a mug of mine last week…here’s the e-mail I received yesterday: Mug questionsmicrowave safe?how about gamma rays? If nuclear attack is impending should I encase it in lead or can I just leave it exposed on the shelf.How about temperature ranges – if as expected my kitchen approaches absolute zero tonight… Read more »

Bonus Weather

A bonus snowfall that totally fooled the weather prognosticators fell yesterday morning and gave us a few inches of beautiful powdery snow, much like the snow I grew up with in Buffalo, NY (average yearly snowfall – 96″!). Usually we have an icy, wet mix here in the Rappahanock River Valley but the frigid air… Read more »

Amusing Myself

The first pottery book I ever owned was “Finding One’s Way with Clay” by Paulus Behrenson and it turned me into a pinch pot junkie for years. I used to use his various exercises when I taught and it was a real pleasure to meet Paulus himself at Penland a number of years ago.These figures… Read more »

As Promised…

The promise was to myself and I’m happy to report that I delivered on it! I spent most of the afternoon of the first day of the year in my studio on Claremont Farm. Mostly I cleaned up and rearranged and dreamed of pots to come.I just returned from another afternoon there spent dipping my… Read more »

More Handmade Goodness

This has been quite the season for generous friends and Xmas continued that trend. I’ve never had a ‘secret santa’ before so I was excited to be invited by a certain red-headed blogger to join in her reindeer games this year.This wonderful pot arrived Xmas eve and there’s no need to tell you who made… Read more »

Legless and Fingerless

For more than 30 years the Christmas season has been a frantic time of making, firing and selling for me so it has been odd to spend this season so sedately. Several of the wonderful gifts I received yesterday seemed to have a theme that I will call “Yes You Had Surgery, Now Get Back… Read more »

Winter Wallop

Usually I’m irritated by the instantaneous title awarded by the TV media to every storm that comes our way…it makes each event seem like a chapter in a rather lurid romance novel after a while. But the Weather Channel has called the lovely snowfall that we just got a ‘Wallop’ and I like that word… Read more »

Our December Extravaganza!

Everyone at LibertyTown has been busy preparing for the last of our First Friday openings of the year (everyone, that is, but me!). Susan Wyatt spent days rearranging the Emporium with a new (for us) idea and it looks great. Elizabeth, Beth and Aline are putting up the “Small Works” exhibition by our very own… Read more »

Another Random Book Review

As I continue to mend I’ve begun rummaging through my collection of books on clay, starting with the oldest and wandering from there. I enjoy the sometimes archaic language and the strong opinions that seem to have disappeared as we’ve gotten more ‘civilized’. The stronger the opinion the better, I say, whether I agree or… Read more »

Thanksgiving w/ an Extra Helping of Thanks!

I’m having a quiet day reading and half watching football with a good fire in the fireplace. Of course, I’m drinking tea with biscuits, too. I’m getting stronger and eating better everyday; I’m just very sore and they tell me that it is normal.I really just want to write to say thanks again to the… Read more »

Survivor : Fredericksburg

Hello again, friends! It has been a whirlwind of a month, from diagnosis to cure, but I am now a part of that growing population that calls themselves a cancer survivor. 10 days ago the wonderful surgeon, Dr. Earnhardt, removed 8″ of my colon and 3 days ago the lab report came back with the… Read more »

Update on Dan Finnegan

(Guest bloggers Anna and John are sitting in for Dan today and want to give you an update…) Without going into too much detail, Dan had surgery about ten days ago to remove the cancer discovered during his routine colonoscopy. All the fixing, patching and sewing that followed the procedure have gone exceedingly well. Dan… Read more »

Just a Few Words of Thanks

Tomorrow is the big day and I just wanted to thank all of the well wishers who’ve been sending me their love, affection and positive thoughts. I have been overwhelmed by the support of friends near and far. Despite the impending surgery, I sit here today feeling a fortunate man to be so rich in… Read more »

Reality…Intrudes…

When I began writing this blog it was in part an effort to refocus my mind on my life as a potter. Running an art center and trying to be a potter at the same time often leaves me feeling discombobulated. It was never my intention to get too personal here, but rather to share… Read more »

Culpepper Purple Stone

Putting down a good bed of gravel in the kiln shed has been one of many items stuck on my list for years…thanks to Mr. Michael Littlefield I can finally cross it off (NEVER use pea gravel underfoot, friends…it forever shifts beneath your feet). Purple stone is an extravagance, but I’m a sucker for pretty… Read more »

Summer Arrives in a Crate

It seems a long time ago, but while I was in England this summer I had the great pleasure of sharing some excellent time with a few fellow bloggers. Hannah McAndrew and Doug Fitch arrived at Toff’s bearing these fantastic gifts for me! I was bowled over!I have a wooden crate full of treasure that… Read more »

Leaning Tower of…

…Things Stacked On Top of Each Other. I took it down today before somebody got hurt.A bunch of pots on the window ledge.You remember Ellie Bird, I’m sure. Here she is with her dad, Paul Cymrot, proprietor of Riverby Books (along with his dad, Steve Cymrot.)Ellie and her 1,000 watt smile!