Clay Body: Laguna's Bmix 10 (Smooth)
Glaze: Blue celadon and Artic (gloss white) cone 10 glazes
Method/Firing: Coil built/Cone 10 Reduction
a chronicle of creative endeavors (mostly) in ceramics, sewing, and cooking
Clay Body: Laguna's Bmix 10 (Smooth)
Glaze: Blue celadon and Artic (gloss white) cone 10 glazes
Method/Firing: Coil built/Cone 10 Reduction
Clay Body: Laguna's Bmix 10 (Smooth)
Glaze: Marshamallow or cone 10 matte white glaze
Method/Firing: Coil built/Cone 10 Reduction
Clay Body: Laguna's Bmix 10 (Smooth)
Glaze: Rutile or cone 10 glaze
Method/Firing: Coil built/Cone 10 Reduction
I liked my Hatch Chile Granny Smith Cheddar hand pies, but I wanted my pies even more savory. And so added a can of Hatch chilies, drained, to a mixture of sauteed ground pork, onion, garlic, adobo sauce, cumin, oregano, jalapeno, and cilantro. I then stuffed the meat and herbs and spices with slices of pepper jack into pie crust, which I brushed with an egg wash and baked for 20 minutes in a 400 degree oven.
Clay Body: Laguna's Bmix 10 (Smooth)
Glaze: Marshmallow or studio white matte cone 10 glaze
Method/Firing: Coil built/Cone 10 Reduction
These days I eat more for nourishment than to tantalize my palate. See my Sunday breakfast and Monday lunch.
A quilting shop where I learned to quilt and use the long arm machine is closing. And so I called in sick to work to rent the long arm and baste a work in progress that had been in my closet for over a decade. I took 3 hours instead of 6 for stitching because I just stitched in the ditch and basted horizontally. It's sandwiched enough for me to both stitch by hand and on my domestic more detailed texturing.
