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Ambleside
Pottery was established by George Cook in the early 1950’s.
Cook had studied in London but decided to retreat from the city and
set up a studio in the Lake District.
In Ambleside he found an ideal site for his studio, an abandoned
corn mill by Stock Ghyll.
Cook
developed distinctive forms of decoration including sgraffito.
Underglaze colours, blue, brown or green were banded over the dried
white clay pot, usually in a panel surrounded with black underglaze.
The coloured layer was then carved away to produce a white
decoration. Shallow shapes such as bowls and plant pots were then
spray glazed. Deeper shapes were biscuit fired before heavy white
glaze poured inside, and thinly painted onto the decoration. The
panels were then waxed and dipped in black glaze. These techniques
were used by employees on their own thrown, jiggered or cast ware.
Cook himself
was a master potter producing many individual thrown or constructed
pieces, mostly in stoneware clay with iron oxide decoration.
Cook
sold the business to Brian Jackson in 1968 who continued to make Ambleside
Pottery, keeping the two distinct lines of white semi-porcelain and
reduction fired stoneware. He also developed his own innovative pots
as did his employees. F.T. Vergauwen developed many such as ash
glazes for the stoneware and the sgraffito decorators adapted the
technique to produce pictorial pots using underglaze colours to produce a
range of wildlife designs on the white clay background. The pottery
closed in the early 1980’s.
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