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Customizable
Custom Shower Detail | Ornament in Decorative Objects by Lynne Meade | Palo Alto in Palo Alto. Item made of stoneware
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Created and Sold by Lynne Meade

Lynne Meade

Custom Shower Detail - Decorative Objects

Featured In Palo Alto, Palo Alto, CA

Price $2,500

Creation: 6-8 weeks
Shipping: FedEx 3-10 days
Estimated Arrival: June 30, 2024

DimensionsWeight
24H x 24W x 0.5D in
60.96H x 60.96W x 1.27D cm
13.61 kg
30 lb

Custom Designed , hand carved, Porcelain Backsplash

Projects are priced individually. This can be made in different sizes to fit your space and with different colors.

Item Custom Shower Detail
Created by Lynne Meade
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Lynne Meade
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2020
Wheel thrown, hand pierced pottery

All of my pieces are wheel thrown and hand pierced. Everything is done by eye, without molds or templates. I initially pierce the piece about two hours after I throw it. I pierce it while it is still fairly wet so that it won’t crack. But the holes are much smaller at this point, so that the piece won’t collapse. I then go back when the piece is completely dry and the clay is rigid, and painstakingly enlarge each hole with a damp sponge. The water in the sponge erodes away the bone dry clay, allowing me to take away as much clay as possible
I love to push the medium as far as I can, seeing how little clay I can leave while still maintaining the structural integrity of the piece. People often ask me why they don’t collapse and I tell them that they often do. Most of the time the problems happen during the hottest part of the firing process. The clay becomes slightly molten and the more lacy pieces can slump or collapse. It is a careful balance between achieving the delicate appearance that I want and not creating a kiln disaster.
I also strive to blur the boundaries between form and function, and function and art. I was trained as a traditional, functional potter. I will probably always want to create tableware and functional pieces, but also can’t seem to resist rebelling against function, and the constraints and limitations of functional ware, just to see how far I can take the clay. It’s all about strength in the form of delicacy