Pinch Pots

June 1st, 2009. China
Pinch Pot

Pinch Pot

Today was my first ceramics class, and I made a pinch pot! A pinch tea pot even. My masterpiece is about three inches tall, and very poorly made. The bowl of the pot has a cracked rim, the spout isn’t high enough, the handle is too small to place your finger inside and the lid doesn’t fit right. But for working with clay for three hours, it’s not too bad, right? What did I expect? To be an expert potter as soon as I walked in the door? Yes, actually. I did.

The Pottery Workshop

The Pottery Workshop

I made the mistake of telling my teacher that I had taken a ceramics class before. Then when he told me to grab a bucket with some water, clay and some tools and get started, I looked around dumbfounded thinking, “um, what tools? where is the clay? how much water?”. Oh, right, clay is normally in the trash bin labeled ‘CLAY’, and tools are those weird looking wire and wood contraptions next to the sink. Then he casually showed me how to make a pinch pot, and I immediately sucked. I was doing the exact same thing as him, but mine looked way different. How did he make the pot smaller at the top? Why isn’t his cracking? How come his lid fits? What am I doing wrong????

After a few tries and a lot of questions, I finally made something that vaguely resembeled a bowl and decided that I needed to go with it. I made a lid. Then made another one. Then made another one. Nothing looked good and time was running out. I told myself that the next one was it and I couldn’t make another, and so I did. It turned out really bad, but I had to run with it. Then I made a couple handles, four or five bases and one spout. I actually made the spout on the first try! It’s not perfect, but I think it might work. I put the pot on the firing shelf, cleaned up my table and told everyone that I’d see them on Thursday.

The class is weekly, and there are open studio hours every Thursday. I want to get as much out of it as possible and I WILL be an expert potter by the time I leave Shanghai. Therefor, I will attend the class to learn the basics and then spend the open studio hours redoing everything. So on Thursday, I will be making a new pinch pot!!

Ikea Shanghai

Ikea Shanghai

Before class, I had to find an apron, so I went to the most logical place. Ikea. Honestly, I probably could have found an apron at a million other places in Shanghai, but I’ve been wanting to go to Ikea ever since I found out it was here. There’s something about the store that I’m drawn to even though I rarely purchase more than a pot holder or apron. I am fascinated by the way they draw you through and the vaguely Scandinavian design aesthetic. I also love watching people go crazy in the store. Today, there were five Chinese women huddled around a bin of sifters. Sifters, you know the ones that sift flour? Well, they didn’t. They didn’t seem to have a clue as to what you might use this contraption for. I guess they didn’t grow up baking cookies and cakes!

Bicycle sun protection

Bicycle sun protection

Overpacked Tricycle

Overpacked Tricycle

Belt Vendor

Belt Vendor

Watermelon Truck

Watermelon Truck

The ubiquitous blue city worker uniform

The ubiquitous blue city worker uniform

On the way back from Ikea, I stopped to take a few photos of things I see every day. Literally every day I leave the apartment, I see watermelon trucks, vendors, over packed tricycles, ladies with sun sleeves, blue suited workers and so much more. I am going to make a pact to myself to actually document all of these every day things that I will forget otherwise. So here is my first installment!

Granny Squares

Granny Squares

I have also started making Granny Squares that will one day be a large blanket. I bought this yarn over two years ago and I’m excited to finally have an idea for what to do with it. I really want to buy more yarn while I’m here in China, but I won’t let myself till this is used. 9 squares down, 500 to go!

5 Comments

Chris:

How many gears to the tricycles have? I ask as I recently took Aubrey and Reagan for a ride in the bicycle trailer and pulling 70lbs sucks!

Chris

Jamie:

Most bikes here are only single speed, so I’m guessing the tricycles are the same. And you should see these guys….it’s a good thing there aren’t any hills because I don’t think they’d make it. They can barely cross an intersection fully loaded.

Your pot is so sweet! I went to see a psychic earlier in the year, who told me I am good with my hands and am probably a potter – nothing could be further from the truth!!

I love the way some things just don’t change from country to country – McDonalds (although I had to drag my friend into the McDonalds in Delhi to see if the funny names for the burgers were true) and from the looks of things Ikea, are always so dependable.

Jamie:

Megan, I think you should try something with your hands…knitting or pottery or even origami. You might be surprised by how much you like it. I know I was when I took my first ceramics class in college. I never thought I was good at that stuff, and now I can’t get enough.

And yes, Ikea is the same everywhere. I’ve now been to stores in four different countries and other than the food selection at their cafeteria….it’s all the same!

love all the projects you have going on, jamie. also love that you see watermelons everyday.

A


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