If you are curious about milk sealing, I did a whole video about it here kzbin.info/www/bejne/j6aun2psqbiIY7M
@Kargoneth8 ай бұрын
Ooh! Next video to watch. Much curiosity! Thanks, Andy!
@Kargoneth8 ай бұрын
Ah. Interesting. Given that casein is pH-sensitive, I wonder how the sealing effectiveness and penetration would change based on its water ratio and pH. Acudity makes casein curdle and clump together. Alkalinity makes it separate and flow. If you curdled it with some vinegar (or by allowing it to sour on its own... eww), then maybe used fire ash or quicklime to turn it basic, then you, might be able to paint it, like a goo, onto the inside of the pot. I am not sure how well it would infiltrate the clay though. What about a casein slip, using the casein as a binder? Many ideas.
@STEVEN-STEELE7 ай бұрын
That's a great video. Iv always liked those lamps. I wonder if it would be easier to make it upside-down. Idk iv never done it B4 but ...
@wanderson627 ай бұрын
Melk?
@TomoyoTatar7 ай бұрын
I use these type of oil lamps to make kajal for the eye. Thank you for giving me a solution!!!
@cookiecookiecookie8 ай бұрын
It's an absolute travesty that KZbin left you off the pottery playlist on the homepage right now. For my money, this is the best pottery content on the platform!
@TomoyoTatar7 ай бұрын
Exactly, this channel is amazing!
@wolverine0056 ай бұрын
too straight white and male
@David-bc4rh2 ай бұрын
not enough tatoos
@DGibsonxioАй бұрын
@@wolverine005love it!
@timaden391629 күн бұрын
Literally!
@fugithegreat8 ай бұрын
I love how you show your process and learning from trial and error. It's so imoortant to show that mistakes or unexpected outcomes are common, even for someone with so much experience and expertise.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Mistakes are literally a part of my process, LOL.
@lilturkey54067 ай бұрын
I love how this guy describes how difficult it is to make one single oil lamp, how many different minute details he has to pay attention to, demonstrating how to do something that I know would be impossible for me to do, and then he just flexes super hard and is like "actually I made three 😏." Absolute legend.
@ammaryohanan95845 ай бұрын
My father was born in 1918 in our village near the city of musol in northern iraq...he told me about using this oil lamp...and how they extracted the oil from a wild plant that it disappeared today...we called this kind of lamps...shragha...in our Aramaic language...and in Arabic siraj...سراج
@muhammadmubeenislam3 ай бұрын
Love from Pakistan
@danielspiteri90189 күн бұрын
Do you know the name of the plant ? Thank you
@ammaryohanan95849 күн бұрын
@@danielspiteri9018 the name in our Aramaic language is ganagarchic but I don't know the name in Arabic
@danielspiteri90189 күн бұрын
@@ammaryohanan9584 thank you
@DawnTiburzi8 ай бұрын
I don't normally comment, but i love how your mind works! So curious, that you dont get discouraged when things don't work! I tend to give up thank you
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
That's what got me where I am today, 30 years of "keep trying" Thanks..
@taitsmith85218 ай бұрын
I learned a long time ago that I usually have to make something about 7 times before I figure out how to do it right. For some reason we are always given the impression that people do things on the first try. That's never the case. People that are proficient in anything got rhat way by doing it a few thousand times. Just have fun with the process, no matter what you pursue.
@Justmebeingme378 ай бұрын
It's people like you that do not like or comment that makes it difficult for content creators. It's easy and free but helps them
@sonnyjs157 ай бұрын
Ya gotta push through that discouragement or you won't be ready when something impossible comes along 😉
@sonnyjs157 ай бұрын
Ya gotta push through that discouragement or you won't be ready when something impossible comes along 😉
@vishnuprasad23127 ай бұрын
you are amazing! in india we get small oil lamps called diyas, they are notorious for leaking oil everywhere and its a mess to clean up! your video answered a question ive been having for ages as to how to prevent that. thank you so much!
@saravanakumar25207 ай бұрын
what we do is get the diyas wet and then pour oil, that way we dont have the oily mess everywhere, just a little water which will dry off quickly from the heat
@jackstrubbe76087 ай бұрын
I used to casein-seal primitive sawdust firings years back. I realized it would have variable results depending on whether i used whole milk or low-fat. My grocer would give me out-dated milk for free, and i discovered older milk actually worked better than fresh.
@ImperatorCaesar227 ай бұрын
Did the whole or low fat work better?
@AncientPottery7 ай бұрын
Yes I was wondering the same.
@AncientPottery7 ай бұрын
Thanks good info. There is not much info on milk sealing online. I am still learning.
@Grunttamer7 ай бұрын
@@AncientPottery if you want to test fat content try sealing one with butter or heavy cream.
@jantona7 ай бұрын
@@Grunttamer I wonder if milk fats in butter being polymerized would have the same issues as polymerizing the olive oil.
@thatguygrimm8 ай бұрын
As a viewer, I can never thank you enough for delivering such an original and entertaining content completely for free. I really appreciate your work. Thanks.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoy it!
@kellydiver8 ай бұрын
I’m a modern potter, but I’m originally from West Texas, and I love your videos. They make me want to go out and find some wild clay and just play with it. 😁
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Thanks, glad to inspire you a little.
@flyntwick7 ай бұрын
I don't even practice pottery. I'm in no way associated with this community. The algorithm served me well today. You've earned a sub. Thanks for the awesome content.
@AncientPottery7 ай бұрын
Awesome! Thank you!
@damienschneider99637 ай бұрын
I didn't catch witch period of the roman era inspire you for this batch of lamps. In imperial roman times, the production in fabricae was quite industrial. They used mold to create lamps, in two parts, bottom and top. Decoration was integrated in it. You pinch the two parts togather and flat the jonction with the finger. The lamps were even flater than your new batch. The hole for filling oil is usualy smaller and the zone around curved inward to guid the oil. Thank you for the video !
@AncientPottery7 ай бұрын
These are not replicas. Just lamps.
@nom_b8 ай бұрын
Andys courses are definitely worth it. You can watch over and over again to pick up on the bits you didn't know you needed to pay attention to 😉.. its especially handy when you think "yeah I know how to do that", but when you do it yourself you realise there must have been some step you missed.. ahh I have re-watched them many times 😅
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Thanks Nom!
@Ghost_Os7 ай бұрын
I'm going to be investing... Any time limit? I know most online courses don't have cut-offs, but some do. Didn't see it mentioned on the page, but it's possible I missed it.
@AncientPottery7 ай бұрын
@@Ghost_Os no. Buy once and get access for as long as my website is on the internet.
@MedullanAutononomous7 ай бұрын
A book would be great for people like me who live in an apartment that need to go camping to be able to build a fire. I can watch the video at home then take the book with me to reference ask the key points while I am actually able to try it in the woods.
@sbdiaries7 ай бұрын
Its lovely to see the lamp come together ❤. An great old traditional way of making an oil lamp ❤❤❤
@noonenowhere69208 ай бұрын
🪔 one of my favorite projects 🪔
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Thanks
@uarestrong768 ай бұрын
What I love most about your videos is how accessible almost everything you do is. And it's usually all made from stuff that can safely return to the environment. I love "new" as much as anyone but i'm coming to learn that in many ways the "old" held up for 1000s of years of human culture for a reason. I actually made my first pottery last week during my post surgical recovery and it was so simple to do, to use and to fire in the woodstove which was already being used to heat the house. Your work brings me unending joy! Clay, Milk, natural fabric, and oil. All primary materials which can return to the earth without hurting us or her. Thank you andy!
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Sustainable products, just what the world needs more of. Someday we will return to that kind of life.
@trishapellis8 ай бұрын
I watch these videos mostly because I like the concept of any random person being able to do something, preferably with materials taken from nature. People making stuff on KZbin will generally tell you about which brand of material they're using, which specific item from that brand, and the idea is reproducibility - if the package you buy has all these words on it then, basically, any differences between my version and the one you make based on my instruction will be due to your skill level and how you choose to deviate from the instructions. But I'd like to know how to make things without having to spend a lot of money. I found this channel because I wondered about pottery glazes - people were glazing pottery thousands of years ago, but when I try to find information about glazing pottery online, all I see is chemicals and minerals like manganese or whatever which may be made in a lab or mined from deep underground for all I know. Turns out you can do it with literal salt (I would be curious to see a video on that). Like I crochet and I buy my yarn from shops, but I know theoretically how to take a fleece of wool, a sheaf of flax or a bag of cotton and make yarn out of them, even dye them. I have a base knowlede of how to make knives out of rocks, baskets out of willow branches, and twine out of nettles. I like knowing how to make stuff literally from scratch. Just in case, I guess. I'm aware it's information I'm probably never going to use - I'm too lazy for homesteading or anything like that - but hey at least I can use this knowledge in my writing and my D&D games. Maybe one day I might even get into LARP.
@wilmahenry9307 ай бұрын
I usually watch only part of a video and then save to finish later… and then usually don’t. But you’re so on point with your sharing and teaching, that I found myself watching til the end! Makes me want to - and feel like I totally could- make an oil lamp myself. I’ll be back.
@triciac10196 ай бұрын
If I don't have a lot of time, I speed a video up.
@philipripper15227 ай бұрын
keep us updated! Not just on any seeping, but I'm curious about burn time too. Thank you the video and your hard work!
@shitpostingsandwhich7 ай бұрын
Didn't expect to be learning about pottery from Bubble's American uncle, but I'm pretty hooked.
@mistertea44877 ай бұрын
😂 I fucking lost it man. Thought it was bubbles myself
@nomam90858 ай бұрын
This is crazy how you are able to work just wild unmodified clay like that, no cracking, no falling apart, just wow
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
The clay is slightly modified, I grind it and add sand temper. But yeah, thanks.
@nancysmith-baker18133 ай бұрын
This was wonderful to watch . All your ways are prity new to me . Did pottery in school in the sixtys, seventys . The oil potts look ancient .ike the way they look . Thankyou .
@AncientPottery3 ай бұрын
no idea
@blockmasterscott7 ай бұрын
Just think, this was cutting edge technology at one point in time. I can imagine someone looking at one of these in awe and thinking “omg, you can carry this around!”
@ensenadorjones42248 ай бұрын
I made one of these for an object lesson to use while teaching about the parable of the 10 virgins at a religious meeting. I discovered your vids many years ago. I teach pottery in Brigham City. I show a Maria Martinez video to my students when we do coil vases. I digitized a vhs from 19 years ago so i could keep showing it in post vcr times but the video i show is now on youtube. I have shown your recent Mata Ortiz video to some 9th graders as well. Thank you for keeping ancient traditions alive.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
I know Brigham City, I used to live in Logan. I love that old video on Maria, I also have a good video about Lucy Lewis that is as good. Thanks
@ericwilliams16598 ай бұрын
The advantage of writing a book is that you can fill it with a lot of pictures of your beautiful work. You could even take pictures of the landscape near where you found the different wild clays. Think more like a coffee table book of all your stunning colors and traveling american southwest.
@ladyw67738 ай бұрын
I'm glad you made another video about this! I've been wanting to try to make these as gifts for the ladies in my Bible study. I'll be looking forward to the update video 😊 A frivolous tip: I use a pour spout for alcohol bottles in my olive oil bottle. Makes pouring much easier - for cooking and otherwise 😊
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tip.
@sethbarry88115 ай бұрын
I poor my olive oil into a Sriracha bottle that works nicely
@homesteadgamer12577 ай бұрын
I really appreciate how well you explain everything. I struggled understanding how milk sealing works because when I needed to use it when my crockpot cracked and couldn't afford to replace it. I ended up throwing it away because everything I found just said I could try milk sealing without explaining or showing how to actually do milk sealing. Right now, I've got your milk sealing video open in another tab, and I'm very interested to see what you teach there. I also homeschool my daughter, and I think this is going to be a great project for us to do together, especially since we've had a crazy winter full of power outages where we're left in the dark and not enough batteries. Thank you again for making this video for us.
@tommiller75378 ай бұрын
Melk. The way you pronounce it reminds me of my own Yup’ik Eskimo people saying milk, “melk.” I love your work!
@rjordans7 ай бұрын
Interesting, "melk" is also the Dutch word for milk 😮
@ReliablyRandom-BuildsReb-rg7mv7 ай бұрын
I spent years planing my channel. when things didn't work with my hand dug clay, I searched and you were there. I have made nice simple things all owed to you.
@AncientPottery7 ай бұрын
That is awesome!
@jameslocke30698 ай бұрын
One thing you might try if this doesn't work is to add a large portion of clean silica sand to your clay, and then fire at much hotter temperature. If you hit the right temp, the sand will vitrify and create a glass glazing.
@ChadZuberAdventures7 ай бұрын
I love your oil lamps! This is definitely a project I want to do.
@Rullstolsboken7 ай бұрын
Been watching a couple of weeks now, where i live is basically a small river valley and the house i grew up in the kitchen is in a slope, it wasn't wheb it was built but because of all the clay, like under the topsoil is just loads of blue clay, the houses set after a while, now its stable, but there about a ten centimeter difference in height over three meters, anyways I've always been interested in ancient practical things such as pottery, gonna try and find some clay and try it out, thanks for all your amazing videos
@petrapetrakoliou89798 ай бұрын
Those Roman oil lamps are mostly moulded in several parts than attached together, that's how the relief decoration gets on them too. But there were oil lamps around in Prehistory too and those were certainly often coiled.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Yes, but this was not intended as a replica, just a hand made lamp.
@rlbadger16988 ай бұрын
I have built many oil lamps. The best size is 3 inch disks and 3/4 inch high. The best sealer is pine pitch. The roman oil lamps are the best.
@willorocks8 ай бұрын
How cool Andy! Wow, I literally just made and fired one of these for my Church the other day. Great tip on the milk, I'll give that a try before we test this thing out on Sunday.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Wow, that's cool Will.
@bullionbacked7 ай бұрын
Use flax oil to season your clay. Then wax it with bees wax. Warm olive oil won't break the seal from the flax seed oil. The fine bees wax layer will protect the flax seed seal. Milk is good too. Also, you could paint a sealant on on made for pottery then do a second fire.
@lizard242527 күн бұрын
Outstanding video. Clear, concise, and complete. Thanks.
@andrewsackville-west16098 ай бұрын
Those are a really nice shape. Too bad about the color not working out, but your facility with the brush is really cool to watch. I love your little bench top doodles!
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@kaytlinjustis56437 ай бұрын
Took a couple of pottery classes in college, but I have learned more in a near fifteen-minute video than I did in two years! Read about old oil lamps all my life, but never knew much about how they're made, or the best kinds of clay to make them, just that people then used whatever they had on hand. Yours look AMAZING! Sure, the spilled milk burned the final result, but they gave them a nice 'aged' look! NEVER heard of milk being used as a sealant before, so learned something new, today! Does the difference in milk-percentage really help or hinder the result? Made a new subscriber out of me! ^^
@bustedkeaton8 ай бұрын
Wow cool! I'll check out the original video too. I didnt know that was a thing.
@joennepease36557 ай бұрын
I just came across your channel and i can honestly say im quite pleased 🌻
@Disruptrt908 ай бұрын
Very cool and a lot of great information. I really like the one with the yellow slip that didn't turn out how you wanted.
@elijahsanders35478 ай бұрын
Love your videos :) One benefit of a book would be having that information in a grid down situation, or in a place that just generally doesn't have internet :)
@mystictree_potterings8 ай бұрын
They are definitely a more oil lamp shape than your original and fwiw I like the milk markings. It will be interesting to see how they hold up but it may be that back in the day they would have been regularly reheated to polymerise the oil. There were a lot of very repetitive tasks within the household and maybe this process would have been one of them. Thanks for the video and the time you spent trying things out.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Yes thanks, you are right, it may have just been one of those things you did every so often. I would like to learn just how durable and long lasting a seal like this is.
@dananichols13747 ай бұрын
Several years ago I bought a Genesis Visions oil lamp replica that was made based on 2000 yr old design from the holy land. Mine was sold with a candle inside. I wish I could post a picture here of it.
@LesterJennings-y7j5 ай бұрын
Your work is must watch for novice potters
@shibibi18 ай бұрын
One thing I like about clay, is it doesn't matter how many mistakes you make while the clay is wet. Everything is fixable tilll it's fired. Even if you let it airdry, the clay can be rehydrated to start again
@CoffeeManiaTV6 ай бұрын
Learned a lot about making pottery in this video. Thank you 🙏🏽 I am glad that these ancient arts aren't forgotten
@triciac10196 ай бұрын
I love making pottery. I haven't made an oil lamp before and it looks so interesting.
@jessicasims17997 ай бұрын
I really liked your video and it’s inspired me to start working with clay again. I always loved clay in class but didn’t continue after school bc I didn’t have access to a Kiln, but now I’ve seen enough home made kilns that I’m sure I can do it myself ☺️ the only thing that drove me crazy was when you started to pronounce MILK as M E L K 😂 there’s no E in it.
@ktforg4 ай бұрын
Had an interesting experience trying to make my own lamp that you might find useful. It's pretty much my first pottery and completely thanks to finding your channel in the first place. Anyway. After grogging, forming and firing successfully, I tried to oilproof it via the oil polymerization method. Due to a slight error, I ended up saturating it with oil and then burning the oil out of the clay instead of polymerizing it, with quite an impressive fire. The REALLY COOL part is that this left the entire pot saturated with carbon, and the lamp is now permanently jet black all the way through. I eventually used pine resin to fully oilproof it by carefully painting hot resin into the hot lamp in several layers, but that hasn't help up perfectly to repeated use, mostly because it slowly degrades from the heat at the spout and then the oil wicks onto the outside from that area. Anyway, I thought you might find that interesting, given your recent video on smudging to color pots and your mixed results on waterproofing experiments. Oil is definitely tougher to stop leaking, but the resin did hold up to at least 3 complete burns with olive and corn oils and over 2 months of sitting with fuel in it, and there were some flaws in my application that I can probably correct. Here's hoping you're still reading messages on older videos like this, and that my experience has something useful for your own experiments. I'm incredibly happy with my lamp and I really enjoy your content, so keep it up!
@nicholassanders5278 ай бұрын
I recently found you and you are amazing. Now I just sit and watch most my day.
@jakeeasterday16638 ай бұрын
I have used one of these in tandem with a copper blowpipe to make a very hot torch flame! It's useful for soldering and melting down small amounts of silver for jewelry making.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
That's pretty cool
@HeWhoMustNotBeNamedYouKnowWho8 ай бұрын
Wow this was a spectacular watch
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Thanks
@forgetfuldullahan54688 ай бұрын
Now im no potter, but I do love how you are looking at the pottery techniques of antiquity. The history of how humans have been lighting their homes for centuries are all caputured right here, and its fascinating. Youve earned yourself a new subscriber, hope to see more from you soon!
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Thanks
@lumikkihusu72598 ай бұрын
I'd be interested in that book, too.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Ok, you're on my list.
@ensenadorjones42248 ай бұрын
I will buy a book but it must have many glossy color photos. But I buy old pottery books and archeology books that focus on pottery. Video is truly the best way to learn to make pottery. Books are better for an academic study of the craft
@TuckerPBerry7 ай бұрын
Andy, thank you so much for making videos that are easy to watch, easier to learn from and are very incredibly focused. About 3 weeks ago I started my interest in pottery again and I’ve learned so much and inspired my daughter to collect clay with me. I hope to have my first project done in a week or so and have only you to thank. Please keep making these videos as your teaching style is perfect.
@JohnSmith-il4wi8 ай бұрын
Andy I absolutely love your channel. I've never even attempted to make anything with clay, but nonetheless, your content is fascinating and captivating. You present all of your info clearly and well thought out. Thank you from Chicago.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
@Lela-p4q7 ай бұрын
I can hardly wait to watch another one of your videos 😊
@ItsSquonkingTime7 ай бұрын
You’re very informative and seem genuine. I appreciate your knowledge and hard work. Thank you.
@mahnamahna32528 ай бұрын
I appreciate books for instances where video isn't available for a variety of reasons. It's nice to have reference books to check something you may not be sure you remember correctly from the video instruction
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Definitely I do the same
@silverriverarts7 ай бұрын
There's actually already a book by this guy named Andy Ward...it's called Mud Puzzles! (Highly recommended!) I'm inclined to think that the lamps were probably just pinch pots from start to finish, and that the curved shape of the bottom was due to them being held in the hand as they were formed. After all, ancient potters were cranking these out as quickly and as cheaply as possible. If they were making them for home use, they had better things to do, and if they were professional potters, they hand more interesting and lucrative stuff to make. I think that your comment about the smaller oil reservoirs is probably spot on. I suspect that these lamps didn't sit around for long periods of time with oil in them. They probably just filled them with enough oil to burn through the night, and by morning they were empty. Fire was a huge and deadly risk, so if the lamp got overturned, you would want to be able to put it out quickly--and if the kids or the dog knocked it over or broke it during the day, you wouldn't want the extra oil to go to waste. The wicking property probably affected the pot itself, too--as the oil burned down, the wick would draw some of what was absorbed into the pot back out again. So a combination of polymerized oil, a small reservoir, and not having the lamp sit around full of oil probably meant that oil seepage wasn't a major factor. Another great vid!
@jerickman7 ай бұрын
As of writing, it's been a couple weeks since the video was posted. Is the milk seal still performing?
@AhJodie7 ай бұрын
How wonderfully fabulous! I love these, and I never thought about firing pottery in my own yard with charcoal. This is the first time I have seen your channel, and I HAD to subscribe! Thank you so much, I am sharing too!
@AncientPottery7 ай бұрын
Thanks. Welcome to my channel I have many other similar videos you might like.
@DANIEL-m3c9f8 ай бұрын
Old Timmer. Potter. You are blessed I have been with you for a m. And the lamps are on the target wow. Still looking for my clay. We talk later great job
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Find your clay and have some fun.
@afwalker19218 ай бұрын
I need one in 40w, for reading.
@AurelioApe8 ай бұрын
Querido tío Andy, justo esta mañana he comprobado el sellado con leche de mi lámpara, tras 24 horas, no ha dejado rastro en una servilleta de papel; el método utilizado fue hervirla durante 20 minutos, introduciéndola en el pote con la leche fría. Secado inmediato de la superficie exterior con un paño, dejar secar la cerámica y rellenar de aceite. Dejaré pasar semanas para observar la efectividad en el tiempo. Gracias por tus vídeos.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Interesting. Did you not heat it up after you soaked it in milk?
@AurelioApe8 ай бұрын
@@AncientPottery No, el calor lo recibió mientras hervía sumergido en leche. Introduje la lámpara en la olla con la leche fría y la herví a fuego lento durante 20 m. Sacar, limpiar la superficie exterior, dejar secar y rellenar con aceite de girasol, por favor no desperdicies el aceite de oliva, oro líquido, en estos menesteres; úsalo en tus comidas, te será más provechoso. La lámpara sigue llena y sin dejar marca en la servilleta de papel. Gracias por contestar, Tío Andy. No, the heat greeted him as he boiled immersed in milk. I placed the lamp in the pot with the cold milk and boiled it over low heat for 20 m. Take out, clean the outer surface, let it dry and fill with sunflower oil, please do not waste the olive oil, liquid gold, on these needs; Use it in your meals, it will be more beneficial for you. The lamp is still full and without leaving a mark on the paper napkin. Thanks for answering, Uncle Andy.
@Misdiasenelcerro8 ай бұрын
I have all my family experimenting with clay thanks to you
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
That's great
@Lela-p4q7 ай бұрын
I'm having so much fun watching you.😮; and I've been looking on KZbin and tictoc to find a channel just like this. You're a wonderful person and a good teacher ❤️. Thanks so very much for sharing yourself and your talent. 😊
@Dojibu8 ай бұрын
Honestly never done or thought about pottery, but I love lamps of all kinds. Definitely an interesting watch. thank the random recommendations. Would definitely be interested in checking back later to see how the milk sealing holds out
@ck60128 ай бұрын
I like your lamps. I’d say that original large lamp would burn for many hours without a refill opposed to the smaller ones. That a cool experiment I’ve done, usually while firing other pottery, is to see how long a lamp will burn on a measured amount of oil. Anyway GREAT video Andy.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
That's true. I have actually lived with oil lamps quite a bit and in my experience you only need it to last from sundown until bedtime so I think this would do but maybe I need to do an experiment to see just how long it will last.
@ck60128 ай бұрын
@@AncientPottery you right, I’d guess your new lamps would burn a couple 2-4 hours on one fill up, so that would be plenty for what you mentioned. I’ve Fired pottery over night and used a bigger lamp that would burn all night without needing a refill 👍
@morganablackwater20178 ай бұрын
That book better have lots of pictures with your beautiful pottery... And I hope it will be available outside of UK cause I do want that book 🖤
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
That's the plan, we will see. I need to find the time to get started on it first.
@JollyFigNut8 ай бұрын
Just wanted to say I really appreciate your videos! I've been interested in pottery ever since early Primitive Technology's videos on their pottery making. Fast-forward and now I've gotten into traditional Chinese tea brewing (gongfu cha) which inadvertently reignited my interest in simple stoneware pottery. I live on the east coast of America and thankfully red clay is super abundant near me. Regardless, I followed your methods in other videos on identifying good and pure sources of clay and succeeded in finding some! I plan on making simple tea pets (small figurines to pour tea waste on).
@micheleenli1118 ай бұрын
AmaZing! Thank You for Creating this! 🌈🦄🌹🤗💖🌹🦄🌈
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
You are so welcome!
@i_am_a_freespirit7 ай бұрын
Wonderful Video, Thank you 🥰
@AncientPottery7 ай бұрын
You’re welcome 😊
@redtobertshateshandles3 ай бұрын
Them lumps look GREAT. 👌
@ethangrazier48998 ай бұрын
As regards the book, I agree that videos are a great way to learn too; however, perhaps an interactive course in book form is best? A tangible book to where you can flick through and visual see on the page where the information is great for recalling to mind. So a written explanation along with a complimentary video (in QR code or some other form) and sample pictures, i feel, would be extremely effective and a modern way to teach this age-old craft.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
I will indeed write a book, and I need to get on it. I am so busy, I wish I had more hours in my days. I write this as I am rushing out the door to film the next video.
@EdenWithoutBreath8 ай бұрын
Lighting is not the only application but also about the air in closed or covered spaces. Try it.
@_Stranger77_7 ай бұрын
Thanks for very good, intresting video ! With Love from Siberia, Russia !
@melinaz33857 ай бұрын
Ancients were so clever, i bet they made molds to form the small oil lamp. top and bottom half then slipped them together.
@davemarx78567 ай бұрын
After watching a other channels video about how one could weld with an oil lamp flame, I find myself wanting to make an oil lamp.
@DarenMiller-qj7bu7 ай бұрын
I'm so glad i found this channel again.
@jfu52228 ай бұрын
Thanks for your insights on a very important ancient technology.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
You bet!
@theresazelazny74458 ай бұрын
Lovely video Andy! I like the added interest of the discoloration. To me it gives added depth to the appearance of these pieces. You do such excellent videos that make your processes accessible. I’ll buy you book.
@hkecowitch8 ай бұрын
thank you for filming and editing this video agree on the point that many people just casually ask someone (to push you) to write a book I can see that you spend a lot of time and effort and heart to film and edit the video, to make it easy to understand the topic I also agree that words and pictures might not be the best way to show movements of hands, tools. text is also not very good at telling texture or consistency of material. only write that book when you feel necessary, but not write it because you are "asked" to do so.
@chaotic-goodartistry39037 ай бұрын
What's really interesting to see is that the middle lamp, where the hole is coming out the top instead of the others where it's kinda coming at a side angle, burns a larger flame than the others!
@matthewwelcher64388 ай бұрын
Have you tried a whistling vessel yet? Made 3 a few months ago and was very satisfying. All 3 broke during pit firing so going to have to try again. Still working on wild clay (Arkansas) recipe that doesn't bust, but at least I have some extra grog now. Great video as always!
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Thanks, no I have not tried making whistles.
@mimi.a.e7 ай бұрын
Bello...siempre me han gustado las lamparas de aceite
@kaylahall12198 ай бұрын
I wonder; those wicks are high quality rope that may not have been available to the people making pots. Could that affect the burn, light output, and sealing of the clay? Burning too hot opening pores leaking oil? 🤔 I love your videos! Thank you
@Mujaki7 ай бұрын
I've seen some ancient lamps where the top of the reservoir is also slightly concave. I suppose it acts like a built-in funnel when pouring the oil onto/into the lamp.
@themincingninjapoofsawayli8988 ай бұрын
Great video. I've never tried anything like this myself but I find it fascinating to watch your experiments. I wonder if the colours didn't oxidise properly because the charcoal wasn't allowing enough oxygen to get to your lamps? Might also explain why it takes such a long time to burn out. Keep on keepin' on :)
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Yeah, could be, this bag of charcoal was a LOT of little pieces. I usually get mostly large chunks. I think that makes a big difference in how it turns and the amount of oxygen allowed in.
@j.c.culbreath-julian42308 ай бұрын
I love hand building pieces, but I can certainly see why the Romans used molds!
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Well it's a great if you are churning out lamps all day every day like Roman oil lamp producers no doubt were. But for your average potter a lamp mold seems like a big investment for one small project. But there are a million ways to do this like.
@magnuswootton61818 ай бұрын
the overhead stirrer is cool.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Thanks
@YAHaqabNatsariym27018 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. It is inline with my heart’s desire. I am going to look into the video instruction also.
@AncientPottery8 ай бұрын
Wonderful!
@Kozu6047 ай бұрын
The way I've seen casein sealing done in the past in tibet is to get a low fat milk and bring it to the boil before giving each piece a dunk or two. This would of course ruin the looks of your particular lamps. I ran into the same problem when I made oil lamps a few years ago, I have yet to actually get around to trying casein sealing but this video is good encouragement to give it a go.
@AncientPottery7 ай бұрын
Thanks for the info. I am still learning how to get a good milk seal.
@petercervantes24467 ай бұрын
Beautiful! Could glazing the whole lamp keep it from leaking?
@KaiAnneClews8 ай бұрын
This is wonderful, I love the idea of painting with cave art. And P.s. I WILL buy your book. Please say a prayer about it, and think about putting your wisdom on paper. Thank you and God bless!!
@Kargoneth8 ай бұрын
You need to design a sintering furnace that is itself made out of clay! Your slip. If I recall correctly, you should be able to use a liquid-wettable piece of fabric to drain liquid. Wet the fabric with the liquid, place part of it in the container, and hang the other side out below the liquid in the container. The surface tension and capillary action causes it to act like a siphon. It can also filter out larger particles. Still not as fast as your boiling of the slip. Milk as a sealant? Interesting. I would have assumed that the casein would be oil-permeable. Perhaps I am wrong, given that it is a suspension in water. Pretty lamps when lit. Perhaps you can increase their combustion efficiency with a perforated/slotted chimney of sorts. Just speculating.
@Chris-P.-Bacon-III7 ай бұрын
on the topic of the slip coloring, since its specifically oxidation... the way you had your setup looks like it wouldn't have allowed for a whole lot of airflow consider the path of least resistance for the majority of the volume: around and out the volume under the bucket is the most important, as that's the one that would feed airflow to your ceramics... but with only either a longer or restricted path available, it's tough to say which would flue. a test run you could try with the same slips: slap a hole in the top of the bucket... stick some mesh or weld a tube on top if you'd be concerned about debris. hope it helps; first i'm seeing of you on here, and i'd put you up there with my top pottery educational channels
@davidnewland25563 күн бұрын
in chemistry its well known like dissolves like, which is why theolive oil softened the polymerized oil