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Salt Marsh Pottery

Salt Marsh Pottery

As John put in the windows of the house we built here in Massachusetts, I began Salt Marsh Pottery, and in time developed my own style. For a number of years I worked alone in one corner of our house, purposely keeping our cottage industry tiny. Gradually I ran out of ideas and had about decided to go into something completely different, when John set aside his painting and devised new designs, our gift card, our large ceramic paintings and convinced me to hire our first employee. That started our "genie-out-of-the-bottle" phase. We grew steadily to about 20 people, moved into an old firehouse, then an old school. Each one of the people working here has improved the line through fresh vision and new ideas such as wedding bouquet dishes, baby prints, and ever better painting. This is partly because the main idea of this pottery is so simple it can lead in many directions. The concept is to roll out a flat sheet of clay and drape it over some shape with texture. We have chosen ocean smoothed stones as shape and flowers for design. We put a flower on top of the stone, slap the clay over stone and flower, pull the dish off, cut and smooth the edges and pull out the flower. After the dish dries, we paint the perfect impression, then do levels of painting and firing. We improve our designs and supply with an intermediate step of a plaster cast from which many pieces can be made. This solves such problems as having enough shad which blooms only a brief time, or getting a customer violets in January. Around 1988, we started making tiles for individual use as trivets or as architectural installations. This led to lamps and mirrors and clocks and a growing part of the business. We use an old orange hand cranked H Frame press (mechanization!) to squash in the design, then hand finish and hand paint them. They are fabulous and getting better. These days people from all over the world come here to see the work in production, pat the bronze bunnies, and enjoy the beautiful area. During flower season people can often watch me make the forms. We're happy to welcome people to this place where we Make a Good Impression!

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About Salt Marsh Pottery

Estimated Revenue

$0-$1M

Employees

11-50

Category

Sector

Materials

Industry Group

Construction Materials

Industry

Building Materials

SIC Code

32

NAICs Code

3271

Location

City

Dartmouth

State

Massachusetts

Country

United States
Salt Marsh Pottery

Salt Marsh Pottery

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