AMIELA CERAMICS
  • Home
  • Primitive firings
  • Bauhaus
  • Functional
  • Exhibitions
  • Judaica
  • Photography
  • Home
  • Primitive firings
  • Bauhaus
  • Functional
  • Exhibitions
  • Judaica
  • Photography
Search

Primitive Firings Ceramic Vases

Upgrading your home design!

Pit firing is the oldest known method of pottery firing. Examples have been dated as early as 29,000–25,000 BC.
Unfired pots are nestled together in a pit in the ground and are then covered with combustible materials such as wood shavings, leaves, sawdust, salts and metal oxides. The filled pit is then set on fire and carefully tended until most of the inner fuel has been consumed. The temperature reached is 800-1,000 Celsius. After cooling, pots are removed and cleaned to reveal patterns and colors left by ash and salt deposits. Since the pots are not glazed, they don't hold water.

Earth and ​fire - Pit firing in action!

Primitive firing is one of the oldest ceramic techniques, dating back thousands of years.  My pit-fired vessels are shaped by earth, fire, and time—each one a unique result of smoke, ash, and flame. I use materials such as sawdust, oxides, and organic matter to create unrepeatable finishes on handmade forms. The mysteries that come out of simply mixing those two elements are a never-ending journey that is fascinating and holds in it infinite surprises.
The process itself is the mentor and the results are the teachers.
The more you do it- the more you find new horizons to search. 

Raku ceramic vases - amamzing home design

Raku ware is a type of Japanese pottery that originates traditionally from the Japanese tea ceremony, most often in the form of tea bowls. "Raku" means "enjoyment", "harmony" or "ease".  It is characterized by being hand shaped rather than thrown, fairly porous vessels, which result from low firing temperatures and the removal of pieces from the kiln while still glowing hot. In the traditional Japanese process, the fired raku piece is removed from the hot kiln and is allowed to cool in the open air or in a container filled with combustible material. It is used once, and thrown away after it. Raku techniques have been modified by contemporary potters worldwide.
Western potters are using the same technique today and creating different styles of vessels. Because the pots are removed from the hot kiln directly - crackles are formed (due to the thermic shock they undergo).

Be the first to know...

    I'm sending offers available from time to time

Submit
  • Home
  • Primitive firings
  • Bauhaus
  • Functional
  • Exhibitions
  • Judaica
  • Photography