Herons are out of the kiln and perched on #8-32 threaded zinc-coated steel legs. I have a few things to revise for the next round, but I'm happy with how these turned out. They were sponge-glazed; spray-glazing will save time when I make more, but these birds were too tippy for that. (Note to self: legs and tail need to make a stable tripod!)
In an interesting reminder that physics is always at play in pottery, the bird necks twisted clockwise during firing. Given that the wheel was spinning counter-clockwise, the frictional force utilized to narrow the necks was clockwise--meaning the necks twisted further when fired, rather than untwisting. Someone told me years ago that teapot spouts can untwist when fired, so here's proof that that's actually a myth: they twist more, not less. (I get around the issue with teapot spouts by pulling the spouts in rather than collaring them in, but heron necks are a little too long for that.)
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