@riorusmana1:

riorusmana
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Saturday 20 July 2024 12:58:50 GMT
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Turning the inside of a bowl, a job that doesn’t take long, it’s merely a scraping of the interior surface to make sure the curve is exactly to my liking. I do this on the DiamondCore Tools sticky pad to keep the vessel in place. The pad doesn’t need to be centred, only the bowl does, so in this instance I can tap centre the form quite roughly to get it into the middle. I would have trimmed the whole pot on the rubbery mat but this bowl was wider than the diameter of it.    Once flipped over I don’t pin the pot down with pieces of clay immediately as first I want to trim very close to the rim, especially in the indent that encircles the pot. After those areas have been turned, I can secure the bowl with three little lumps of soft clay, which are pushed down against the metal, letting the excess squash out into the bowl, rather than forcibly pressing the stoneware into the bowl itself, as doing so can distort it.    Now the rim has been turned I focus my attention on the walls and then the foot, before moving on to hollowing out the foot-well, which is likely the trickiest aspect of turning bowls as having the right tool for the job really makes a considerable difference. I have a few I like and have been using for five years or so now, although one of DiamondCore Tools trimmers that was recently gifted to me works great as a gouger to remove lots of the internal mass before using a variety of other looped tools to define it.    It’s then stamped, the displaced clay turned back, and the pot lifted away. If I do feel like the foot-ring is too soft to lift without distorting it or my fingertips sink into the leather hard clay, then I’ll first blast the clay with a heat-gun, (a paint stripper, or a hairdryer/gas torch will do the job), just to take the edge off it, so it isn’t deformed, then I’ll neatly pluck the finished bowl away.    (Product gifted in return for online promotion)    #trimming #diamondcoretools #pottery #bowl #howto #craft #process #tools @DiamondCore Tools
Turning the inside of a bowl, a job that doesn’t take long, it’s merely a scraping of the interior surface to make sure the curve is exactly to my liking. I do this on the DiamondCore Tools sticky pad to keep the vessel in place. The pad doesn’t need to be centred, only the bowl does, so in this instance I can tap centre the form quite roughly to get it into the middle. I would have trimmed the whole pot on the rubbery mat but this bowl was wider than the diameter of it. Once flipped over I don’t pin the pot down with pieces of clay immediately as first I want to trim very close to the rim, especially in the indent that encircles the pot. After those areas have been turned, I can secure the bowl with three little lumps of soft clay, which are pushed down against the metal, letting the excess squash out into the bowl, rather than forcibly pressing the stoneware into the bowl itself, as doing so can distort it. Now the rim has been turned I focus my attention on the walls and then the foot, before moving on to hollowing out the foot-well, which is likely the trickiest aspect of turning bowls as having the right tool for the job really makes a considerable difference. I have a few I like and have been using for five years or so now, although one of DiamondCore Tools trimmers that was recently gifted to me works great as a gouger to remove lots of the internal mass before using a variety of other looped tools to define it. It’s then stamped, the displaced clay turned back, and the pot lifted away. If I do feel like the foot-ring is too soft to lift without distorting it or my fingertips sink into the leather hard clay, then I’ll first blast the clay with a heat-gun, (a paint stripper, or a hairdryer/gas torch will do the job), just to take the edge off it, so it isn’t deformed, then I’ll neatly pluck the finished bowl away. (Product gifted in return for online promotion) #trimming #diamondcoretools #pottery #bowl #howto #craft #process #tools @DiamondCore Tools

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