
|
So you think you may want to throw pots? Here's the test. Answer true or false to the following statements:
|
If you answered true to any of those statements, this may not be the right choice for you. Pottery is dirty. It takes most people about 6 months before they begin to like their own work. Until then, it's mostly practice and paperweights. Pottery is like weightlifting or playing a musical instrument; you will improve with practice and training. Most people are not born with a strong sense of how to play the piano, and the more you practice the better you get. It is not quite like riding a bike*, where you learn the skill and do not need to keep practicing.
You will need to throw twice a week every week for the first month to get any proficiency at all. If you know that in the middle of the month you will be taking a vacation, wait until the next month to start. If you know that you don't have the time to practice, don't take this class. You will be wasting your time. You need to allow yourself the room to succeed, and without that practice time, you are wasting your time, the instructor's time, and the class's time. Imagine going on a diet 2 days a week and you'll get the idea of your possibilities of success.
Beginning classes are taught on Saturdays from 1:30 to 3:30. Beginners class is $85 for a 4 week (one month) class which includes 1 bag of clay and firing for 1 month. We take a minimum of two people per class and no more than 4 at a time. Due to time and kiln constraints, we stop adding new people in November and restart classes in February.
Beginner classes take place on Sunday afternoons from 11:00 to 1:00.
Topical classes are on Wednesday nights from 6:30pm till people run out of energy.
* I mean riding a bike non-competitively. Obviously everyone can get better at riding if they train. I mean the sightseeing style of riding. Also, I am in no way disparaging bike riding, sightseeing or otherwise. Seriously, if I could wear those shorts out in public I really would.