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 |     Pottery     |  |
| > | $5 fee is for the project in Requirement 5. |
| > | 2 day badge with 2 hour sessions M & T. Meeting Th night post firing. |
| > | Req. 7 will not be covered at camp. |
| > | Session limit 20; Pre sign up required to insure your spot in the class. |
Requirements
- Explain to your counselor the precautions that must be followed
for the safe use and operation of a potter’s tools, equipment, and other
materials.
- Do the following:
- Explain the properties and ingredients of a good clay body for
the following:
- Making sculpture
- Throwing on the wheel
- Tell how three different kinds of potter's wheels work.
- Make two drawings of pottery forms, each on an 8 1/2 by 11 inch
sheet of paper. One must be a historical pottery style. The other must
be of your own design.
- Explain the meaning of the following pottery terms: bat, wedging,
throwing, leather hard, bone dry, greenware, bisque, terra-cotta, grog,
slip, score, earthenware, stoneware, porcelain, pyrometric cone, and
glaze.
- Do the following. Each piece is to be painted, glazed, or otherwise
decorated by you:
- Make a slab pot, a coil pot, and a pinch pot.
- Make a human or animal figurine or decorative sculpture.
- Throw a functional form on a potter's wheel.
- Help to fire a kiln.
- Explain the scope of the ceramic industry in the United States.
Tell some things made other than craft pottery.
- With your parent's permission and your counselor's approval, do
ONE of the following:
- Visit the kiln yard at a local college or other craft school.
Learn how the different kinds of kilns work, including low-fire
electric, gas or propane high-fire, wood or salt/soda, and raku.
- Visit a museum, art exhibit, art gallery, artists' co-op, or
artist's studio that features pottery. After your visit, share with
your counselor what you have learned.
- Using resources from the library, magazines, the Internet (with
your parent's permission), and other outlets, learn about the historical
and cultural importance of pottery. Share what you discover with
your counselor.
- Find out about career opportunities in pottery. Pick one and find
out about the education, training, and experience required for this
profession. Discuss this with your counselor, and explain why this profession
might interest you.
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