çömlek atölyesi

listen to the pronunciation of çömlek atölyesi
Turkish - English
pottery
A potter's (work)shop, where pottery is made

I visited the old potteries and saw the pots being made.

The potter's craft or art: making vessels from clay

Bernard Leach was skilled at pottery.

a term loosely applied to all objects (wares) made of fired clay   It includes factory-produced dinnerware as well as artistically reinterpreted industrial forms, sculpture, and hand-produced utilitarian/functional ware   As its root "pot" suggests, it is mainly applied to containers/vessels
the craft of making pots from clay
> See 'earthenware'
Objects, and especially vessels, which are made from fired clay It represents the various articles made of fired clay
Can be used as a generic term the same as ceramics Then referring to a specific ware, pottery refers to a very durable form of clayware made of crude clay and fired at comparatively low temperature It lends itself best to colourful, informal decoration and simple shapes
The term refers to the various articles made of fired clay
All pottery is simply made from fired clay - but with the addition of temper to make the fabric more resistant to heat shock as well as stronger For unglazed pottery a high enough temperature may be reached in a bonfire, but a kiln will decrease breakage due to uneven firing and also allow control of colour by restricting the amount of oxygen reaching the pottery
[n] a factory that makes clay pottery
Ware made of clay and fired in a ceramic kiln
ceramic ware made from clay and baked in a kiln
{i} art of working with clay; vessels made of ceramic; potter's workshop
all fired ceramic wares that contain clay when formed
Pottery is the craft or activity of making objects out of clay
The place where earthen vessels are made
a generic term for clay objects
You can use pottery to refer to the hard clay that some pots, dishes, and other objects are made of. Some bowls were made of pottery and wood
or Steingut - a rather imprecise term for a usually light-colored porous ceramic with a hardness dependent upon the temperature of the firing, from 960°C (1800°F) to 1300°C (2350°F); generally used to include all tan-colored ceramic materials
the craft of making earthenware
çömlek atölyesi
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