Hi! To the owner of the cute mushrooms, I accidentally bumped into your mushroom while trying to get my ware-board behind it and broke it. I feel so bad! I AM SO SO SORRY!!!
Not to worry, I can most likely slip it back together.
Hello Sis0505,
I noticed your mushroom pieces don’t have a date on them. There’s a green slip (our attention tag and are various colors), attached to your work. Moving forward, please make sure to include both your name and the date on all your pieces to avoid any confusion.
Just a heads-up: the Ceramics Department is introducing a new policy for items without names and dates. Unfortunately, undated/unnamed pieces will be discarded immediately, without the usual 21-day holding period.
We want to make sure your creations are safe, so adding this info is super important! Thanks for understanding!
Thanks
So sorry, this is from the class on the 22nd for the show and sell event. I haven’t been able to make it back to put them on the bisque shelf for those that made it.
Not to derail, but I thought we weren’t allowed to have slipcast molds on those shelves even if it’s for the purpose of the slip drying?
I am not aware of that rule. I’ve been telling my students that they can put the molds there for drying, following the same rules as other items.
Mind you, I’ve haven’t been in charge of the slip-cast stuff for all that long, in perspective.
Molds shouldn’t be on in progress for longer than 48 hours, at least that’s what we used when I taught class.
We should check source for any potential changes
And, if that is the case, it should also be part of the signage on the In-Progress shelves.
Ah true. I forget about source
Certainly I feel like I remember molds can’t be in there when not in use for forming or slip drying. But irrc we didn’t want people like, folding clay over a bowl for a leaving it for ages meaning no one else could use it. Like the turntable thingies that I can’t think of the name of
Yes like the “banding wheels”