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Elwick
Mill, SHAPINSAY, Orkney, KW17 2DY
Telephone Balfour (01856) 711211
E-mail: dpots1@yahoo.ca
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Raku
means pleasure enjoyment, and is the name given to this type of
pottery.
The technique
was developed in 1597 by two Korean potters and it quickly rose
to fame with the cult of Cha- No-You.
The bowls were
specifically made to satisfy the dictates of the tea ceremony.
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The speed and simplicity
of contemporary Raku have made this type of ware very popular with hobbyists
and ceramicists alike.
Pre-fired
pots are rapidly heated to 1000 C, removed from the kiln glowing red
hot then plunged into a container of sawdust. This creates a reduction
atmosphere, starving the pots of oxygen, so it takes oxygen from the
oxides
in the glaze producing spectacular hues of copper, gold, silver and
many other exciting colours. |
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Raku Ware cannot be
used for serving food; therefore, Raku should be used for decorative purposes
only.
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These
elusive and highly prized glazes vary in colour from a deep red of
the sang de boeuf to delicate pink of the peach bloom and are particularly
suited to a porcelain body. |
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wares are fired over several hours in a kiln chamber starved of oxygen,
and this technique of reduction controls the beauty of the finished
glaze. |
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Traditionally these pots were fired in a climbing kiln dug out of
an hillside in the shape of a tapered tunnel, the narrow end forming
the chimney, and was fired with wood. Copper red is the name given
to these glazes which were first developed by the Chinese potters
during the late Sung and early Ming dynasties around the fourteenth
century. |
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Elwick Mill
is a former corn mill, now in the process of conversion and renovation.
A solid stone constructed building; built in 1883 and last used
as a corn mill in the fifties.
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Future proposals are
for a pottery workshop and gallery on the ground floor and partial restoration
of the mill workings and wheel.
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The project
is expected to take several years. A temporary pottery workshop
and studio is in the original single story mill dating back to the
seventeenth century although very little evidence of its original
wheel and workings now exists. Local clay (from Shapinsay is now
being used for certain items and is a rich firing teracotta clay.
Visitors welcome
to see the goods being made.
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Open
10am - 4.30pm not Mondays.
If you would like
to contact David with a message or question, please fill in the form below
:
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