برچسب: John

  • Urns For Pets | John Ellefson

    Urns For Pets | John Ellefson


    John Ellefson | Episode 1101

    As a sensitive and intuitive person, working with clay is a perfect fit for John Ellefson. Clay slabs are minutely sensitive to the slightest touch, allowing John to create the subtle forms that he loves. It’s incredibly satisfying for John to breathe life into clay through touch.

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    Do you see a change of pets going from being a family pet to more of a family member?

    That’s an interesting question. My answer to that is definitely yes, but I have never thought about that before. It could be that I live in a city that at one point and time had more pets than children. And so pets by nature of this population have a lot of importance but I think definitely, for sure.

    Why is a beautiful urn an important thing for a pet owner to have for their pet?

    Well, that’s a good question. I think that my urns serve to honor memory of the pets or people that are inhabiting the inside of that urn. It just feels really important to me that the outside is going to do the inside justice.

    Do you ever have conversations before and make a kind of collaboration or do you make the product and then someone buys the product?

    Definitely some of both. Some people have specific visions of how they want the urn to be and other people are like, Can you make this in that color? And they are fine. There is a really wide range of people and personality type about how they approach that.

    Why do you think there are people who want to keep that connection with their pet in their home like that?

    Well I have definitely come across people for whom their attachment to their pet is way stronger than it could have ever been for a person. And I can speculate a to why but I have seen that first hand and so it makes absolute sense that they would want something special.

    Is working with a veterinarian or a local cremation place a recommended approach to take?

    It has been the key to success for me, doing wholesale work, for sure. I think wholesale work can be difficult because you are not earning the full value of the piece that you are selling. But for me the market is very specialized. I don’t necessarily have access in a way that a pet funeral home would have or that the veterinarians would have.

    What do you do to have fun when you are not in the studio?

    Well, spending time with my family for sure. I enjoy coaching my daughter’s soccer team and as a family we like to go on family bike rides. And I also like designing tools, (laughter) which is also done for fun.

    Book

     

    The Gift by Lewis Hyde

     

    Contact

    touchformedmemorials.com

    Instagram: @john.ellefson





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  • Salt Spring Island Artists | Francine Hampson & John Reid

    Salt Spring Island Artists | Francine Hampson & John Reid


    Francine Hampson & John Reid | Episode 1104

    Francine Hampson and John Ried are the owners of Mudpuppy Studios, a production pottery studio producing functional ware. The studio wares are mainly thrown on the potter’s wheel with alterations and additions done by hand building. The clay is high fire stoneware fired in a 15cu. ft. gas kiln introducing salt/soda at 2350F. The effects are spectacular but unpredictable. The wares are sold locally on Salt Spring Island through the Waterfront Gallery or Artcraft/ Wintercraft shows.

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    Being on an island do you ever feel cut off from the rest of the world?

    Francine: I don’t. I had some really good advice from the first year I lived here. An old, old, woman who had lived here over 40 years, My advice to you is to get off the island at least once a month. Because if you don’t you’ll go cuckoo. So I don’t get cabin fever. We are coming a going and doing different things and getting around.

    John: I don’t feel that need to get off the island. In fact I think I have become more of a recluse. I kind of like it on the island. It has everything I need. There’s over 400 musicians on this island and I have two musical groups that I play music with and then I’ve got my studio time. I am also quite involved in the community and a lot of people recognize me around the island, so I really don’t need to go off the island.

    How is the access to ceramics supplies?

    Francine: Well, we don’t have a ceramics supplier on Salt Spring. We are too small. But Vancouver Island, which is where the city of Victoria is. It’s one of the largest islands in the world and in Victoria is Victoria Clay Arts but then we drive up that island in the other direction there’s Vancouver Island Pottery Supply in Parksville, British Columbia.

    John: And we use Amazon. I recently had some Raku gear delivered from Toronto, so that is always a possibility.

    Because it is a tight knit community do you ever feel competition among artists?

    Francine: I don’t feel that at all because I work in salt-soda and I do high-fire. It’s not very common here. Most people are doing cone 6 or lower, electric firing.

    John: I think it’s more a supportive community than a competitive community. I think everybody just networks and if you have an issue you can ask somebody else and everybody is really forthcoming with information. That is the beauty of a small community.

    Book

    In Good Hands by Ellen Easton McLeod 

    Soda, Clay and Fire by Gail Nichols

    Contact

    mudpuppystudios.ca

    Instagram: @mudpuppystudiosssi

     





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