Wednesday, October 29, 2025
Clay Bowl Art Project
Tuesday, October 21, 2025
Clay Celtic Knot Trivets and Wall Hangings
Celtic Knots may be trending in tattoos and jewelry lately, but these interwoven designs have been around since at least, the 7th century. These knots are woven lines that have no beginning and no end, and studying them gives us a peak into world culture and history, as well as the use of symbolism in art. My students were especially interested in how the meaning of things can change with as the people change. The Trinity Knot now represents the holy trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, but in pagan times, the same knot represented birth, death, and rebirth, or youth, adulthood, and old age.
After learning about various knots, the students produce their own knots, not with drawn lines, but clay coils. This is a great way for students to merger meaning with ceramic techniques and skills . The fact that the finished product can function as a trivet, is yet another bonus.
I printed a bunch of various famous knots, laminated them and hot glued the edges to make templates that my blind students could use. They could also choose to make up their own knot design and symbolism.
One student laughed when I told her that rolling a coil was a skill, so I let her try to roll one without any instruction. Her first attempt took a long time to get a dried, flattened slug like shape. With a few tips she made a longer, rounder coil in a fraction of the time. The trick is to start with your fingers and hands together and and roll them from the tips of the fingers to the bottoms of the palms while spreading the distance between the hands and fingers to stretch the length. Most people beginners just roll the length of their fingers, and they are not creating distance between hands and fingers before coming back to the middle to roll and stretch it again. It's important to be sensitive to where the thick parts are and apply more pressure, while lightening pressure at the thing parts. If the coil does flatten a little, twist it like a candy cane (minus the hook) and continue rolling.
Once the coils are made, the weaving can begin. Wherever there is overlap, or ends joining together, score each side (scratch using a needle) and apply slip or water before pressing them together. The clay should be wet enough that the coils don't crack when lifting and bending during the weaving process.Monday, October 20, 2025
Monster Pencil Cans
Wednesday, October 15, 2025
Clay Beads
Kids pushed cards, metal embossing tools, or skinny paint brush handles into the sides of the beads to make interesting textures and patterns. One day we worked with porcelain and another we worked with terracotta. The colors were so beautiful that we decided not to paint or glaze them. We used Twisteezwire to string them, and it was the perfect size to fit over an adult head )with some overlapping twisted part int he back) for a necklace. The moment that a child realizes that they just made a piece of jewelry out of basically mud.
Conference Art Contest
I started submitting my student's artwork for the national Insights Art Contest in conjunction with the American Printing House for the Blind Conference. Every year, I had at least one or two win awards, which was pretty exciting for me because it meant getting to see kids fly on a plane for the first and possibly only time in their lives. They also rode on trains, escalators, elevators, and walked for miles using their canes in an unfamiliar city.
This year, there was no Insights Art Contest, but the Georgia Vision Teachers Educators Training (GVEST) conference committee offered me a venue to showcase my student's work at a state level. I'm always looking for new venues and chances to show off what they've been working on, so I set up a table, and put out a voting box for the hundreds of attendees to help choose a favorite.
The results are in and other than a cash prize for the first place, it was just certificates and pats on backs. I don't discount the value of a pat though. Students need a chance to be recognized even if it is just in front of their class. They need a chance to show off their work. This is a line on a resumé, and it's the 3rd college campus some of my students have shown their work in the past 2 years, which is something I would have loved to have done when I was in high school. Letting otherwise marginalized kids have a chance to shine makes my heart happy.
















