388. How to Spiral & Ram’s Head Wedging/Kneading Clay 菊練り with Hsin-Chuen Lin 林新春 菊練/揉土全攻略

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  • čas přidán 17. 03. 2020
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Komentáře • 30

  • @stefanietam3391
    @stefanietam3391 Před 4 lety +2

    please stay healthy and safe during these times ! we are super grateful for your videos and your generosity, but want you to prioritize health during these scary times

  • @robertcole1098
    @robertcole1098 Před 4 lety +1

    Very nice demonstration, I’ve never seen the rams head cut in half and rejoined but it totally makes sense , thank you. Cheers Bob 🇬🇧

  • @pooiabeik3042
    @pooiabeik3042 Před 3 lety +2

    You are truly amazing~
    During past few years, I've learned a lot from you. I admire you! And I feel really grateful to you.
    This one is just another marvelous lesson for anyone interested in ceramics+ Thank you so much!

  • @jesminerickson1741
    @jesminerickson1741 Před rokem

    I liked when you made the eyes for the ram's head :) all your videos are so informative and helpful thank you so much!

  • @eungjoolee7032
    @eungjoolee7032 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you Mr. Lin. This video is so much helpful.

  • @elel1036
    @elel1036 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Mr. Lin. I have been watching lots of your videos and they helped me a lot in my learning.

  • @sammi-joreviews1135
    @sammi-joreviews1135 Před rokem +1

    This video has tremendously helped me . When my girls were toddlers, I took a series of pottery classes primarily as refreshers. In addition, I took them to have access to various kiln options. The instructor taught how raptor wedge clay using the ram head method. It caused my pots to shatter due to air bubbles. I ran across a website that recommended the spiral wedging. My wedging improved. Albeit,finding your videos with in-depth info on spiral wedging has made the problems caused by bubbly clay a thing of the past.
    I do wish you had a video that is ‘up close & personal’ to help me with throwing a deeper pot, including compressing the bottom. I’ve been working on wedging better, pulling up the sides, cleaning the inside as well as the rim compression… yet somehow I can’t quite go deeper before pulling the sides. Also, I’m able to feel my clay center faster & better than ever! Thank you so much for the help & information on the plaster wedging/reclaiming my clay. Most of what I’m throwing now is being sliced in half to see where my weakness(es) reside.

  • @PanEtRosa
    @PanEtRosa Před 4 lety

    oh, great! thank you for the expanded update on this technique.

  • @jenuinefuntoys
    @jenuinefuntoys Před 4 lety

    Ok. I'm off to practise now!

  • @luizamore
    @luizamore Před 4 lety

    Awesome video! Thanks for the help, still struggling with spiral wedge

  • @ZenTodoDia
    @ZenTodoDia Před 2 lety

    Muito grata pela partilha! Muito didático, o que faz toda a diferença! 🙏

  • @sophietakach5683
    @sophietakach5683 Před 4 lety

    When you use your right hand it looks more like what I see when I try to spiral wedge :P I need to practice more...

  • @veroniquemaggiorotti625

    THANKS a lot ! Ad last I anderstand ! Oufffff

  • @PanEtRosa
    @PanEtRosa Před 4 lety +1

    Wait, doesn't cutting and flipping the halves of clay risk introducing more air bubbles? Especially around the edges, even if you're careful about making the halves meet cleanly in the center?

    • @hsinchuen
      @hsinchuen  Před 4 lety +1

      I don’t think so. You can try it yourself.

    • @shaneboesen5545
      @shaneboesen5545 Před 4 lety +2

      No, theres a form of wedging called stack wedging where you repeatedly cut the clay in half and stack it, then hit it against the wedging table. It's a technique I use, because i havent perfected spiral wedging yet

  • @roslyncaudwell7009
    @roslyncaudwell7009 Před rokem

    Is there any difference when wedging porcelain clay? I find it stiffens up a lot when wedging, but then is really soft when throwing! Any tips?

    • @hsinchuen
      @hsinchuen  Před rokem

      You probably added too much water when throwing.

  • @handmadepottery2135
    @handmadepottery2135 Před 4 lety

    I throw clockwise but spiral kneed anticlockwise, will I have better pots if I learn to spiral knead the same way as I throw?

    • @hsinchuen
      @hsinchuen  Před 4 lety

      I don’t know about that!

    • @davezad
      @davezad Před 2 lety +2

      This question intrigued me so I looked into it. Japanese potters traditionally throw clockwise and wedge anti clockwise like you do. Evidently, the key is to have the trailing arms of your spiral going in the same direction as your throwing style. This is why they throw clockwise. Having the clay platelets oriented with the wheel direction makes it easier to center. That seems to be the sole benefit, though. Even if the spiral is put on the wheel in reverse, coning up and down will act as its own form of wedging and that puts the clay into the right direction. Supposedly you can feel the spiral more when it's reversed as it fights the centering process. In the discussion I was reading, the potter ultimately figured out that when this happens, rather than change how you wedge, you can simply flatten down the pointy part of the gumdrop formed by spiral wedging - make the shape into more of a ball - and put it on the wheel technically upside down. Since all that really matters is spiral direction.

    • @handmadepottery2135
      @handmadepottery2135 Před 2 lety +1

      @@davezad Thanks for that, it makes sense.

  • @FFSS60
    @FFSS60 Před rokem

    Should I spiral wedge clockwise if I throw left handed on the wheel?

  • @deemdoubleu
    @deemdoubleu Před rokem

    Is this the optimal amount of clay to wedge in one go or do you normally do more? Thanks.

    • @hsinchuen
      @hsinchuen  Před rokem

      Depends on how strong you are, people can spiral wedge up to 20Lb at a time. For me, I’d probably wedge 7-8 Lb. If need more clay, I can always stack them up.

    • @deemdoubleu
      @deemdoubleu Před rokem

      @@hsinchuen many thanks