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Published Nov 23, 2017

Today is Thanksgiving Day in America, and since Thanksgiving usually involves getting together with loved ones and eating yummy food, we have a tradition of posting a recipe (for food, not glaze!) on Ceramic Arts Network.

In today’s Thanksgiving post, we are sharing not only a recipe for a delicious peach cobbler, we’re sharing a project from Nolan Baumgartner on making a lovely split and scalloped rim batter bowl. Enjoy and warm wishes to all of you this Thanksgiving Day! –Jennifer Poellot Harnetty, editor


The comforts of home, food, and family are indivisible from one another, and dinners with family and friends bring a refuge of food and good conversation. The experience often starts before most of the company shows up, when our family is in the kitchen preparing the meal—snacking, drinking coffee, and taste-testing the food together. Having hand-made objects to prepare and cook in enhances the experience (even if they may include some clunky things I made in high school) by introducing the vessel as a new, or maybe long-forgotten, friend.

I grew up in Northern Utah in an area known for its orchard fruit. Making various desserts and drinks from the always-plentiful peaches, apricots, apples, and cherries is why I always look forward to late summer. Fruit cobblers have always been my favorite part of the season, and, while the fruit is the real star of the show, you need a delicious crust mixed in a hand-made batter bowl to tie everything together.

Beginning the Bowl Form

To begin, start by centering 4 pounds of clay and pulling a cylinder with a dished/rounded floor into a “V” shape, slightly taller than it is wide (mine are about 9 inches tall and 7–8 inches wide). Keep the walls straight and make sure there’s a good bead of clay (½ inch thick) at the rim. Don’t give the cylinder any rounded shape yet, or it will collapse when you try to split the rim.

1 Split the rim using a chamois. Then shape your bowl.2 Mark six even spots on the edge of the rim using a blunt tool.3 Pull the pinched area up and in with a dowel while supporting it with your other hand.

Splitting the Rim

Compress the rim with the side of your finger to flatten it. Moisten the rim and with a chamois use your thumbnail to push the center of the rim down (1). This is very similar to creating a gallery in your rim to hold a lid, only it’s on the outside of the rim. Compress the rim this way until a ¼-inch ledge and a ¼-inch upright section are formed.

When you’re finished splitting the rim, shape the form. Make sure the interior curve is consistent so it’s easy to use.

Scalloping the Rim

Divide the rim into your desired amount of scallops. Place a decorating disc on top of your form, making sure that it’s centered, and mark the outside of the rim at the appropriate numbers (2). I use a tapered hardwood dowel to do this—don’t use anything sharp (like a needle tool); the rim will tear.

After you remove your decorating disc, pinch the shelf of the rim into the upright section at each of your marks. Working now on the left side of the form with your dowel in your right hand, pull the dowel into the side of the form and lift a little. Simultaneously as you do this, take your left index finger and thumb and squeeze the clay on both sides lightly toward the dowel (3). This creates the peak of the scallop.

Next, with your left index finger and thumb supporting the peaks, use the side of your right index finger to stretch the upright section onto the ledge (4). Repeat for five of the six sections. This process also will stretch the rim out a little.

4 Support the peaks with your left hand, and fold the upright section down onto the ledge to create the scallops.5 On the last section, pinch the ledge up lightly, and pull the spout. Smooth the spout carefully with a chamois.6 Bring the spout out to 45° with your right index finger while supporting with your left hand. Trim the batter bowl on a chuck.

Creating the Pour Spout

On the sixth, un-scalloped area, lightly pinch the shelf up into the wall of the split rim—don’t blend it yet. Working with this area on the other side of the wheel from you, pull the rim straight up (not out) until you get a nicely arched spout (5). Try not to pinch your fingers together as they leave the clay. With your wheel turning slowly, use a chamois to smooth out the ragged edges. Now, with the spout pointing to the right, use the side of your right index finger to shape the spout outward while your left index finger and thumb support the outside of the rim. Bring it out to about 45°. Leave it wide enough so that a thick batter will pour out easily.

Finishing the Form

When ready, trim the batter bowl on a soft- to leather-hard chuck (6). The chuck is just narrow enough to fit inside the scalloped rim, and at least 1 inch thick. If it’s a fresh chuck, scrape all of the slip off of the surface with a metal rib, and make sure the top is bulky, has the same curve as the inside of the bowl, and it’s supporting the area where your foot will be. A good rule for bowl chucks is to use 113–1½ times more clay than you used in the original form—this way you have enough clay to make it tall and sturdy enough.

7 Pull a center tapered handle, and cut asymmetrically, leaving more width on one end.8 Use a dowel as a paddle to shape the upper handle attachment.9 Attach the handle, checking that it’s vertical and the negative space looks right.

The Handle

I pull a handle for the bowl by first rolling out 12–14 ounces of clay into an elongated bow-tie shape, flattening it, then pulling from both ends. When I get it to the right thickness and taper, I cut it asymmetrically so that there’s a bit more width on one end (the top of the handle), and a smaller amount on the bottom connection (7). When it sets up, I use a 1¼–inch dowel to bulk up, round, and cup the end that’s attaching to the scallop (the beefier end) (8). I use a small paddle on the other end to bulk up the lower attachment, then score, add slip, and attach (9). Check the negative space, and make sure the handle is straight up and down, and then you’re done!

Unfamiliar with any terms in this article? Browse our glossary of pottery terms!