Click here to browse all CLAYflicks videos.

Search CLAYflicks

Watch Preview:

 

In this video, you’ll get a glimpse into a day in the studio with Simon Levin as he shares his streamlined process of throwing and trimming pots primarily off the hump.

Contents:
Chapter 1 - Tulip Bowl
Chapter 2 - Yunomi
Chapter 3 - Rice Bowl
Chapter 4 - Snack Plate
Chapter 5 - Pasta Bowls
Chapter 6 - Small Mugs
Chapter 7 - S Cracks
Bonus - Liberation
Bonus - Fun

Here’s a sampling of what you’ll learn:

  • Throw and trim pots off the hump, thus creating a streamlined flow throughout a day in the studio
  • Make faceted “tulip bowls,” textured yunomis, rice bowls, small plates, pasta bowls, and a mug!
  • Use a variety of paddles to alter the shape and add texture
  • The secret to preventing S-cracks!
  • and much much more!

Total runtime: 2 hours, 35 minutes

Gallery

About the Author

Simon Levin

Julia Galloway Julia Galloway is a utilitarian potter, director of the School of Art and professor at the University of Montana, Missoula. Julia was born and raised in Boston. She earned her BFA at New York State College of Art & Design at Alfred University and her MFA at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Julia has exhibited across the United States, Canada, and Asia and her work is included in the collections of numerous museums including the Smithsonian in Washington D.C. and the Long Beach Art Museum in Long Beach, California. She has served on the boards of the Haystack Mountain School of Crafts and The Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts. To learn more about Julia, please visit www.juliagalloway.com. Simon Levin Simon Levin has been working in clay since 1990, when an elective ceramics course in college changed the direction of his life, leading to an M.A. and an M.F.A from the University of Iowa. He is a full time studio potter working exclusively with wood firing. His award winning work is exhibited internationally, and appears in several contemporary ceramic books. Simon is a writer for many ceramic journals, and in 2013 he traveled to Taiwan as a Senior Fulbright scholar researching local materials. As a kiln builder Simon has built wood fired kilns for both US colleges and universities as well as schools in Taiwan and China. Between 2005 and 2018 his apprenticeship program started has trained and influenced 17 young potters. A resident of Wisconsin for 18 years, Simon has recently moved to Pawnee, Illinois, where he is currently re-establishing his pottery. To learn more about him or see more images of his work, please visit www.simonlevin.com.
Unfamiliar with any terms in this video? Browse our glossary of pottery terms!
Load more comments
Thank you for the comment! Your comment must be approved first
avatar
Log In or Sign Up to be able to comment