Showing posts with label crockery design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crockery design. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 June 2012

Plates with patterns and pictures

 

Plates designed for a recent competition! This provided the happy motivation for reviving my interest in plate artwork - like these designs last year, now I'm exploring turning these plates into reality. I'm pleased with the fancy cuff made of fruit segments.


Designing plate rim patterns is a satisfying exercise, and lets face it this edging is more important than the central design when it's hidden under your dinner. All edgings and designs are hand drawn, scanned in and digitally coloured.



Sunday, 18 September 2011

DIY Making in the summertime

I had the pleasure of planning a series of workshops and events at Site Gallery, Sheffield during this summer simply named 'DIY Summer at Site', and I squeezed in some cheeky moments to join in the making and diy-ing. It definitely quenched my thirst for learning some new tricks, DIY Summer exposed me to new techniques which I'd love to employ later. I had the joy of working with Crow and Dunnage screenprinters to make my (shameful to say first ever) screenprint, on a tshirt, of a caravan!



Secondly I joined in with a crockery workshop run by Lianne Mellor of Mellorware, namely 'Crocolage' a lovely combination of collage with transfer decals and glazes, onto a 'pop' mug, cereal bowl and plate. I once had a chintsy ship cup so very similar to this and it mysteriously disappeared. After a few years of pining it was a great day receving this ship mug back from the Mellorware kiln, so similar to the first that I can rest easy. Plus I have a trout in the bottom of my cereal bowl which I defy anyone to say isn't ace.


 Earlier this year Bloc Projects in Sheffield ran a Collage Party with artist Elizabeth Rowe, and I had such a great time that I asked Elizabeth to return to Sheffield to run a larger scale Collage Party in Site. I was full of a bad cold but still absolutely loved it. We collaged the gallery walls and even the gallery exterior - and this time around some of the cuttings and collages were amazingly intricate, some disturbing and others almost accidentally beautiful.


Collage Party at Bloc Projects