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How A Native American Potter Uses The Tradition Of Horsehair Pottery | For The Culture

Traditional Acoma pottery has been made in the Acoma Pueblo area of New Mexico for centuries. The pottery is easily recognized due to its thin walls and the intricate geometric designs painted on the exteriors. Eric Louis grew up in Acoma Pueblo learning how to make this type of pottery. And today, he adds modern techniques like horsehair and molds to make the traditional pottery something of his own.

Erics Etsy Shop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/PuebloAcoma...


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Altered Forms  •   Asian and Asian influenced work  •   Boxes, Hand Formed and Wheel Thrown  •   Ceramic Artists Who Break the Rules  •   Ceramic Drama  •   Clay around the World  •   Clever Ideas: Tools and More  •   Closed Containers  •   Colored Clay: Nerikomi and Agateware  •   Colored Slip Work  •   Coordinating Multipart Forms  •   Cuerda Seca  •   Cutting/Carving  •   Decorating your work  •   Double-Walled Pots  •   Engobe  •   Extreme Hand Building  •   Fantastic Decoration  •   Finding Creativity in Clay  •   Gallery View  •   Gentle Work  •   Glaze and Decoration  •   Handbuilding, Review and Grow  •   Handles  •   How to photograph your work  •   Influences -- In and Out  •   Influential Potters (The Greats)  •   Installations and Performance Pieces  •   International Ceramic Artists  •   It's a bowl, it's a plate, it's a bowl!  •   Lamps  •   Making Small Pieces -- Jewelry, Button Making  •   Moon Jars  •   Mugs  •   Naked Raku  •   Native American Techniques  •   Not exactly clay related, but very interesting  •   Precision in Hand Work  •   Printing on Clay  •   Production pottery  •   Sculpture  •   Special session -- Texas Clay  •   Terra Sig, Saggers  •   Throwing!  •   Tools!!!  •   Trimming  •   Wall Decoration  •   Warren MacKenzie and a few friends   •   Wax and Shellac Resist  •   Wedging  •   Wheel Work  •   Wide Ranging Perspectives on Pottery  •   Working with an extruder  •  

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