Showing posts with label Andy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andy. Show all posts

Monday, June 4, 2012

Compost II

We threw this compost container together the other night (which is why the pictures are so dark). We took this idea from our friend Andy, because our other composter wasn't big enough for all of our compost and this was really easy to put up.


What we did was hammer in about 6 stakes in a roughly circular shape.


And then wrapped some chicken wire around it to keep all the compost together.  Later we'll go back and cut the tops off of the stakes and start to fill it with compost.  We also put some hay down in our garden, mostly over the soaker hose, in hopes that it will help keep the plants moist and cool during the summer heat.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

General Update

It’s been a while since I last posted and I wanted to just let everyone know what was going in the days of our lives. As the world turns I have been teaching my pottery class down at the Firehouse Art Center for about four weeks now. I’m really enjoying it and I have great kids to work with, and they all are at different levels of experience so it makes each class more interesting (because they each have different goals they want to reach). We all had a really bad storm this past week that wreaked havoc on the city of Norman, it tore down a bunch of fences, took off some roofs, and shut down electricity in some areas for a couple of days. The worst we got was no electricity for about a day, and the hail did a number on our garden. Mainly it looked like a couple of guys took machine guns to it, every plant had broken stems, every leaf was ripped apart, and the few fruits we had looked like they had exploded. But it’s on the rebound. We also had to take out our corn; ants had taken up residence in the few tiny ears that were growing, so they went in to the compost pile. We have also let the garden in the very back get over run by grass (it’s the plot with the pumpkins, watermelons, and artichokes), it’s to the point now that I feel it would be easier to just get a tiller and till it up again instead of trying to do it by hand or with a hoe. Keturah has started to experiment with making cameos, she is trying to carve one out of an abalone shell we have had sitting around for a while. We are also planning a big weekend in the studio this coming weekend, so hopefully there will be pictures of the work we are doing now by early next week. I have also (with the help of our friend Andy (well he really did everything)) have a new computer and I’m slowly trying to get all the programs I usually use to edit photos back on it so I can post pictures again. We also have joined a bread exchange with a few friends of ours, and the first delicious loaf arrived last week. This coming month is our month to send out a (hopefully) delicious loaf. We are on the fence as to what kind of bread to make, we are looking at either a very nutty bread (maybe with some dried fruit as well) or a spicy bread. Another item on the docket is that we might in the near future have something interesting going on with a shop in Arkansas (more on that later, I need to get Keturah on the phone with some people to get more details). I guess that’s just about everything that needed to be updated, although I’m sure that I’m forgetting something.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

The Downside to an Updraft and the Upside to a Downdraft

We fired the kiln from the last post, and it did pretty good. But the whole firing I was thinking that if it was a downdraft it would be way more efficient. As it was firing I kept imaging that the flame/heat was just going up the sides and out the top, never reaching the middle (which is where the pottery is). It did manage to reach a bisque temperature in only a few hours, but the firing was very uneven. A downdraft kiln will cause the firing to be much more even, and as I said before, more efficient. A downdraft kiln works by having the flue and the burners at the bottom of the kiln. The idea being that as the heat rises it will hit the top of the kiln and be forced back down to where the flue is. This causes the heat to work double, because it is touching the work twice instead of once like in an updraft kiln. So I decided to rebuild the kiln again and try to make a downdraft kiln. Simon Leach had done this to one of his electric kilns, and it seems to be working great (although his kiln is much larger than mine, but I’m told size doesn’t matter). The only thing holding me back was not having the materials to make the chimney that would be required. Lucky I have a good friend named Zack who just happened to have two spare kilns that he didn’t mind parting with. So now I had three kilns to play with. One of them was pretty beat up so I decided to cannibalize that one to make the other two kilns into downdraft kilns.



I started out by replacing the lid that I had cut a hole into for the updraft kiln, with the lid that had already fallen off the other good kiln. I then took the lid off of the bad kiln and put it on the other good kiln. I know that sounds kind of convoluted but it’s what had to be done. But then I had two kilns that where in good working condition.








I then started taking apart the kiln I was going to use for parts, this part went pretty quick.



After that I started work on where the chimney would go on the inside of the kilns. I did this by removing the part of the wall where the elements went; it was fairly easy with a hammer and a metal scraper. It did make a bit of a mess, and I would highly recommend wearing a mask or some kind of mask to help protect you from the dust.







I then had to decide on how I was going to build the rest of the chimney. I knew I was going to use the soft brick that I got from the bad kiln, but I didn’t know how I was going to put them in the kiln. My plan was to make these interlocking pieces that would go up the side of the kiln, and then put the larger bricks right up against them.



So I set out to make a bunch of these little interlocking pieces, and to cut the larger bricks down to a size that would work with those little pieces. Around this same time I was also thinking of how they would stay in place once they were all ready. I was going to use some of this old kiln wash that I was hopeful would act like glue. I was sadly mistaken; it didn’t work in the slightest. So I had to rethink the whole idea, and I was only going to be able to use the materials at hand. I don’t like the idea of buying materials just to see if something will work, if I could possibly use something I already have. That’s when I looked at the mess I had made while sawing through all those soft bricks.



It had made a lot of dust, and I thought if I could mix that with some slip (liquid clay) it would make a great mortar for the chimney. So I set out to make a lot more dust by grinding up the little pieces of soft brick that were sitting around. I used our blender to accomplish this task, because grinding them by hand would have taken forever (don’t tell Keturah, she doesn’t know and probably wouldn’t appreciate the time saving route I took). Just after I finished grinding all of the brick I thought I would need Keturah came home, and I showed her what my idea was for the chimney. She thought it was a lot more work than I had to do, and she suggested that I just cut the soft bricks edges at an angle so that the edges would be flush against the part of the kiln that I didn’t cut off. Of course she was right, and it would have saved me a lot of time if I would have thought of it myself. So I decided to make one kiln the way I thought of (mostly because I already had all the parts cut and ready for one of the kilns), and one the way Keturah thought of. Here are the two kiln chimneys. The first one is the one that I thought of and the next is done the way Keturah suggested. In the second one you can see the (barely) the hole at the bottom of the chimney to let the heat escape.





By this time I was feeling pretty good about myself, and decided I was done. As I was walking back to the house I thought to myself “Now how will the heat get out of the kiln…”, and then I realized that I forgot to cut the hole in the lid to complete the chimney. So I head back to the studio to cut some holes in the lids of the two kilns. The green stuff you see around the hole is chromium oxide, which I use in addition to a coil of clay to help me know where to cut the hole. I put the coil of clay around the top of the chimney, and then painted the chromium onto it and while it was still wet I closed the lid. This left a green mark showing me where the hole needed to be cut.





After this I was done, and I went inside to eat lunch and write this blog. Although as I’m writing I have realized that I forgot to cut the burner port out on the new kiln…

I know this has been a long post but if you could hold on for one more paragraph I would appreciate it. My friend Andy is participating in a fund raiser for Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. He and a number of other artists each made a limited edition print that are being auctioned off on EBay. So if you get a chance please go and check them out and if you can make a bid, it’s for a good cause. Here is a link to Andy's print, and a link to the prints by the other artists.

Friday, April 22, 2011

No Need to Knead

A couple of weeks ago our friend Andy came up to help us plant our garden, and he brought with him a wonderful recipe for bread. He then made us three loaves, and left us with two and a half. They were delicious; here are some pictures of the breads










There was an olive, white, and a wheat loaf. Since then I have made a couple more olive loaves and they were delicious as well. This post doesn’t have much to do with art but I haven’t done much art so there you go…

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Garden Party II

Finally the garden has been planted!! It’s all very exciting. Our friend Andy came up form Dallas to help us plant everything, and he even showed us how to make an amazing no knead bread (more on that later). Here are a few pictures of our newly filled garden.





Update:
We lost a couple of plants due to very high winds and a little cold weather. We lost our pumpkin, watermelon, cantaloupe, a couple artichokes, and a pepper plant (I’m not sure which one). We have re-sown seeds directly into the ground in hopes that they will grow, we will see.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

God Made Dirt, and Dirt Don’t Hurt

Finally we have dirt, or compost and top soil to be precise, but we have it. Now our garden can go ahead with out further delay. We will be putting our plants in the ground on the first of April, our friend Andy (and hopefully his wife Leah) will be coming down to help us move our 140 plants into their new home. This first picture is of our raised bed (s) I calculated (with my advanced maths) that it is about 190(ish) square feet. It took 2 and a quarter tons (4.5 thousand pounds) of compost and about a ton of top soil to fill it out. I spent about 4 days filling it up (it would have taken one or two if I didn’t have to go to work), and now it is satisfyingly full.



This next picture is where we will be planting our watermelons, cantaloupe, pumpkins, and possibly our artichokes. I gave it a layer of compost to amend the soil, and in hopes that it would kill the grass and weeds. But to my astonishment grass and weeds like nutrients too, and they quickly sprouted up through the compost. So we decided to cover them up with plastic and cardboard boxes in hopes that this will kill them (our thoughts were that it would block the light and get too hot for them). We will see how well it works next week.



This final picture is of where I will be planting my 40 sunflowers. I’m hoping that the fence will provide some support (and I can tie them to the fence if necessary), and be a wind break as well.



And the news you all have been so patiently waiting for…I finally bought a pottery wheel!! It should be here early next week, and I can get started throwing some new stuff. But more on that later…