Don’t be fooled by the images, they make this pot look better than in reality…

The colour of the glaze is spectacular!Bok wrote:Along comes fifteen.
Although I am quite happy with the overall shape, this pot has some issues.
First of all, the lid does not fit very snugly. However it is flat enough to not let any air in, it just moves sideways. When i trimmed that pot I enlarged the interior rim to much, so none of the lids I had prepared fit perfectly anymore.
The lid handle instead of a knob works well though and I like the look of it.
I also tried another style of handle which is quite comfortable to hold.
This pot is also a lot lighter than my previous ones.
The bigger issue I have with that pot is the colour…
It was supposed to be a sort of dark green with lighter undertones. My Dasixiong (older student brother, like they also name it in Kungfu schools) advised me not to spray this particular glazing to thick as it thickens up and drops down, which can glue things together.
I guess that made me to cautious and I sprayed it too thin. The colour is now more of an olive green and at times even orange where the clay shines through. You can even see some fingerprints of mine, where I held it while cleaning the glaze off the rim and bottom of the pot.
Waterflow is also far from perfect and trickles unevenly.
William wrote: The colour of the glaze is spectacular!
It certainly looks nice. The unevenness of the glaze gives it an almost "yohen" quality without being such. It may not be what you intended, but it has an interesting style of its own.Bok wrote:William wrote: The colour of the glaze is spectacular!![]()
I guess it depends on one’s own expectations.
In my head I had imagined (and was looking forward to) that nice mat dark green I had seen on one of my teacher teapots…
For me personally it is too glossy, which is why was dissapointed on how it turned out. But as your comment proves – that’s all personal!
Thank you! Glad if my path can inspire the one others are takingSlowOx wrote:I'm inspired. This is quite fascinating. This is... inspiring!! I'm addicted to this thread already!
What are you going to do with all these pots?
Good idea, might take you up on that one!debunix wrote:Now imagining a lid design where the triangular shape is carried along one axis--but on the other axis it is pinched in to make a tab instead of a 'knob'.