|
View Larger Image
|
|
In today's tip, an old clay bag is turned into a bat-removal device.
|
|
August 11, 2008
Easy Bat Removal: A Quick and Simple Tip for Getting Grippy Bats off the Potter’s Wheel
by Michelle Kaisersatt | Read Comments (1)
If you are a potter who uses bats when throwing on the potter’s wheel, chances are you have had to wrestle with a bat or two to remove it from the wheelhead. Sometimes the suction-cup effect is so strong (especially with thin plastic or masonite bats) that when you finally break the bat free using a knife or pin tool, you have also distorted a perfectly thrown pot. Ceramic Arts Daily reader Michelle Kaisersatt came up with this simple solution for removing those extra grippy bats without hurting your freshly thrown ware. So struggle no more! –Jennifer Harnetty, editor.
Easy Removal of Bats - No Knife Necessary!Bats are not the easiest things to remove from the potter’s wheel once a piece has been thrown. Here is a simple tip for making “bat remover handles” out of the top three inches of the plastic bags in which moist clay is packaged. Cut the top three inches off of a clay bag, keeping the plastic intact as one continuous loop. Lay this strip across your wheel head before placing bat onto wheel, placing it near but not over the pins (figure 1). Place bat on wheelhead (figure 2) and throw your piece. When you are ready to remove the bat, place your index fingers inside the overhanging loops of the strip (as shown in the image at the top of the page) and pull up. With the equal pull on the bat, near the pins, you are able to lift the bat off the wheel with out throwing your newly created piece out of round.
If you don't buy premixed, packaged clay, any thicker plastic bags could be used for this purpose.
For more great ideas for the studio, have a look at Studio Practices, Techniques and Tips in the Ceramic Arts Daily Bookstore. In this helpful resource, potters share their knowledge on a full range of topics including designing a studio, making and using tools and equipment, photographing work, marketing and sales,
kilns and firing.