:INFO Three Techniques, Endless Forms Hand building uses three core methods: pinch, coil, and slab. Pinch pots are the fastest to learn and teach you the most about clay thickness. Coil building lets you make tall forms without a wheel. Slab construction is ideal for geometric shapes, mugs, and tiles. Most experienced potters combine all three in a single piece. :PATH Choose the Right Clay Body Earthenware fires at cone 06 to 04 (around 1000C) and is forgiving and soft. | :INFO Choose the Right Clay Body Earthenware fires at cone 06 to 04 (around 1000C) and is forgiving and soft. Stoneware fires at cone 6 or cone 10 and is dense, durable, and food safe. For hand building without a kiln, air-dry clay works for decorative pieces but is not waterproof or :PATH Pinch Pot Basics Start with a ball of clay roughly the size of a tennis ball. | :INFO Pinch Pot Basics Start with a ball of clay roughly the size of a tennis ball. Push your thumb into the center leaving about half an inch of base. Rotate the ball while pinching outward with your thumb inside and fingers outside. Aim for walls 6 to 8 millimeters thick :PATH Coil Building Step by Step Roll coils to about 1.5 centimeters in diameter on a clean smooth surface. | :INFO Coil Building Step by Step Roll coils to about 1.5 centimeters in diameter on a clean smooth surface. Score the base and each coil join with a fork or serrated rib tool. Apply slip (clay mixed with water to a yogurt consistency) to each scored surface. Press coils firmly and :PATH Slab Construction and Joining Roll slabs to 8 to 10 millimeters using guide sticks on either side of your | :INFO Slab Construction and Joining Roll slabs to 8 to 10 millimeters using guide sticks on either side of your rolling pin. Let slabs firm up to leather hard before joining or they will slump. Score, slip, and press all joins. Reinforce inside corners with a thin coil of soft clay pressed :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Clay has no memory of what you intended. It only knows what your hands did. :NOTE Drying Is Where Most Pieces Fail Uneven drying causes cracking more than any technique error. Thick bases dry slower than thin walls and the tension tears the piece apart. Cover thicker sections with damp cloth while leaving thinner sections open. Never dry pottery in direct sun or near a heat vent. A slow, even dry over three to seven days gives the best results.