Description

This yarn bowl was hand thrown on my potters wheel using strong stoneware clay. Finished in a glossy olive green speckled glaze.

A yarn bowl stops your wool from rolling over the floor as you knit. A must have for any knitter or crocheter.

No two bowls will ever be exactly the same. The pictured item is the one you will receive.

Height: 91mm
Diameter (at top rim): 150mm

The wool pictured is a 50g ball of double knit  (not included), there is ample extra room for larger balls of wool.

All of my handmade ceramics will be well packaged prior to shipping, I’d hate for anything to get damaged in the mail. Happy to combine shipping, post worldwide and all of my items are made and ready for immediate dispatch.

4 reviews for Yarn Bowl – Olive Green

  1. 5 out of 5

    bradleyhaywood -on Etsy

  2. 5 out of 5

    Annie Taylor -on Etsy

    Lovely as always. I have a red one and now a green one. Love using them . Think I will keep an eye out for an orange 1 to make a set of traffic lights!

  3. 5 out of 5

    caitlinpage2 -on Etsy

    Great, exactly as it is in the picture, and arrived the day after I ordered it. Made a wonderful gift for my mother who’d been trying to find these everywhere!

  4. 5 out of 5

    Gail -on Etsy

    I gave this to my friend for her birthday and she thought it was absolutely beautiful!!!

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£28.00

Yarn Bowl – Olive Green

This yarn bowl was hand thrown on my potters wheel using strong stoneware clay. Finished in a glossy olive green speckled glaze. A yarn bowl stops your wool from rolling over the floor as you knit. A must have for any knitter or crocheter. No two bowls will ever be exactly the same. The pictured…

Rated 5 out of 5

4 reviews

Out of stock

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How It’s Made

By Hand.

All of my work is handmade, predominetly on a potter’s wheel. Once the clay has been prapared the ball is transfered onto the wheel where the form is pulled. Once made, the peice is left to dry slightly overnight to a leather hard consistency before hopping right back onto the wheel to be trimmed with turning tools to remove any excess clay and refine the shape.

Once the clay has fully dried out after a week or two it goes into the kiln for the first firing – the bisque – where it will be slowly heated to 1030°c. The piece is then ready to glaze. Glaze is a slurry of different clays, chemicals and metal oxides which melt in the second kiln firing to create a glass-like surface, the metal oxides creating the colours. During this final firing the kiln will reach 1220°c.

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