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Endangered Craft Week

21 to 26 March 2022 marked the inaugural #EndangeredCraftWeek, an effort by Heritage Crafts and partner The Prince’s Foundation to shine a light on the urgent need to preserve traditional craft skills.

Over the course of the week we profiled five craft businesses that involve skills featured in the Heritage Crafts Red List of Endangered Crafts.

HRH The Prince of Wales is President of Heritage Crafts and of The Prince’s Foundation. Heritage Crafts was set up in 2009 to support and safeguard traditional craft skills in the UK. Every year we award the President’s Award for Endangered Crafts to one of the nation’s most skilled practitioners, with a £3,000 bursary to invest in ensuring that their craft remains viable.

Applications for the President’s Award for Endangered Crafts are open until 29 April. To find out more visit https://heritagecrafts.org.uk/presidentsaward.

 

Features

 

York Handmade

York HandmadeMonday it was the turn of York Handmade, based in Alne just North of York, founded in 1988 and operating on a site where bricks have been made since the 1930s. The company can make bricks of all shapes and sizes in a variety of colours and textures to match existing buildings. They have manufactured bricks for several award-winning heritage projects, conserving the glory of these buildings for generations to come.

The company created 47,000 Dumfries Blend bricks for The Queen Elizabeth II Walled Garden at Dumfries House, headquarters of The Prince’s Foundation. The restoration project won the Best Outdoor Space award in the Brick Awards, the Oscars of the brick industry, for its “magnificent achievement” in restoring the walled garden to its former glory.

It is estimated there are fewer than 20 professional makers of handmade bricks remaining in the UK. Currently there is a healthy demand for the work, but with such a small workforce and fluctuations in supply and demand can have significant effects.

 

Kate Brett

Kate Brett by Kristin PerersTuesday’s focus of #EndangeredCraftWeek was Kate Brett of Payhembury Papers, who has made traditional marbled papers by hand since 1982. Kate, based in Perthshire, specialises in reproducing traditional patterns by floating water-based paints on a size made from carragheen moss.

Marbling began to develop slowly in Britain in the second half of the eighteenth century. Though listed as an endangered craft today, interest in marbling is steadily increasing as a result of social media and a growing appreciation of the traditional technique as opposed to cheaper digital reproductions.

Photo by Kristin Perers

 

AS Handover Ltd

AS Handover, photo by Jackson's ArtThe spotlight on Wednesday fell on AS Handover Ltd, who hand make professional quality brushes at their workshop in Welwyn Garden City.

Established over 60 years ago, their wide range of products are used by the country’s finest artists and craftspeople in museums, film studios, stately homes and the Houses of Parliament. Their customers range from independent artists, signwriters and decorators through to the royal household at Buckingham Palace.

Brushmaking is highly skilled and the training period is long. However, brush manufacturers, particularly those making fine artists’ brushes, are reporting high demand and that their businesses are growing, so there is hope that this craft will be off the Red List before too long.

Photo by Jackson’s Art

 

Graeme Bone

Graeme BoneMeet Graeme Bone, maker of handsewn kilts from Auchinleck in East Ayrshire and graduate of The Prince’s Foundation’s Future Textiles and Modern Artisan training programmes. Graeme, who featured in our Endangered Craft Week series on Thursday, has become a flagbearer for traditional kilt-making and handcrafted menswear. He previously worked in the steel industry, but left his job to pursue his passion for garment design and manufacture.

Kiltmaking was added to the Red List in 2021. Most kilts are still bought from kilt retailers, not directly from the skilled craftspeople, who often work behind the scenes on a piece rate, underpaid for the work that they do. The kiltmaker as a craftsperson has been largely invisible, but Graeme and his contemporaries are working hard to remedy that.

 

Rebecca Struthers

Rebecca Struthers by Andy PilsburyRounding off our inaugural #EndangeredCraftWeek was Rebecca Struthers, a traditional watchmaker based in Birmingham and current holder of the Heritage Crafts President’s Award for Endangered Crafts.

Rebecca uses traditional methods, materials and techniques in the restoration of vintage and antique watches as well as the production of her own. She is the first, and currently only, watchmaker in the UK to earn a PhD in horology.

There are only a small handful of businesses still practising traditional watchmaking in the UK today, with fewer than 20 traditional makers earning a living from making as opposed to repair and restoration. It is now virtually impossible to create every component of a watch in the UK due to a shortage of allied craft businesses, including spring-making and jewel-making.

Photos by Andy Pilsbury

Lucy McGrath and Eloise Dethier-Eaton

Lucy McGrath and Eloise Dethier-Eaton

Heritage Craft Training Case Studies – Lucy McGrath and Eloise Dethier-Eaton

 

How does it feel to let a new person in to your thriving craft business?

Cockpit Arts

Lucy McGrath runs Marmor Paperie, a successful paper marbling business with a studio at Cockpit Arts. Despite being a relatively young business, it has grown rapidly and Lucy has become a well-respected marbler who is not afraid to push the creative boundaries of the craft. Marbling is time consuming and Lucy was finding it challenging to both build the business and continue to develop the technical expertise in being a traditional marbler. She was keen to spend more time on publicity, developing new ideas and products, and her mission to preserve marbling skills for the future.

It was time for someone new to join the business. Lucy comments that this did raise some important issues for her and it was important that this happened when she was ready. On a practical level she ensured that she could financially support a member of staff and that the available studio space would allow it but, on a personal level, she also acknowledges that this is not always an easy transition to make:

“It is hard to relinquish control and bring someone in. I would recommend it.”

In 2019 Eloise joined Lucy’s business through the Cockpit Arts’ Creative Employment Programme. This pioneering programme was set up to respond to the needs of the craft sector and provides support to craft employers at the stage when they are ready to grow their business. It is aimed at young people aged 16-24 from the local area with an aim to reduce the barriers to employment and create more opportunities in the craft sector over the long term.

Both Lucy and Eloise’s experience of the programme has been very positive. Eloise has completed the apprenticeship and will continue to be employed in the business alongside developing her own creative practice as a print maker. It has been successful in that is has enabled the business to grow and new products have been developed. Lucy describes the viability of a craft business as “the point at which it gets repetitive, when it becomes about refining the process, consistency and control of materials” and it is this that marks the transition from skilled amateur to professional maker. Eloise can now contribute to the business as a skilled professional maker and also in helping to run day to day operations. Lucy has found that it has freed her up to finesse her own high-level marbling skills and to try new approaches.

There have been some frustrations along the way. There were elements of the Business Administration apprenticeship, particularly the ‘off the job’ training, that were challenging to manage in a small business. In short, the end result was very positive and the support received from Cockpit Arts was invaluable, but the formal process of completing the apprenticeship sometimes felt like “a means to an end”.

When asked what she has learned from the process, Lucy says that “communication is the key to success!” She is also keen to point out that it is this passing on of skills that will ultimately ensure a future for her craft in a contemporary context.

“Heritage crafts need to be kept fresh and interesting. Look for someone who is different to you, with different skills, and who will challenge you in a good way.”

 

Apprenticeship Structure

  • Length – 1 year
  • Qualifications gained – Level 2 Business Administration
  • Financial Support – Supported by the Cockpit Arts Creative Employment Programme and funded by the William Boreman’s Foundation. A wage grant of £3,800 was received that covered a third of the total wage bill.
  • Payments to apprentice – Paid at above the apprenticeship minimum wage
  • Recruitment process – Advertised and recruited through the Cockpit Arts’ Creative Employment Programme.

Reverse glass sign painting

The HCA Red List of Endangered Crafts

 

Reverse glass sign painting

 

The making of signs by painting and applying metal leaf (verre eglomise) to the reverse of glass panes. See also brilliant cutting.

 

Status Endangered
Historic area of significance UK
Area currently practised
Origin in the UK 19th century
Current no. of professionals (main income) 6-10
Current no. of professionals (sideline to main income)
21-50
Current no. of trainees Many people have trained with Dave Smith
Current total no. serious amateur makers
Around 10
Current total no. of leisure makers
Around 51-100

 

History

 

Techniques

  • French embossing (most endangered)
  • Acid etching (most endangered)
  • Brilliant cutting (endangered)
  • Water gilding
  • Silvering (endangered)
  • Angel gilding
  • Verre églomisé
  • Graining (related to marbling)

 

Local forms

 

 

Sub-crafts

 

 

Issues affecting the viability of the craft

  • Skills issues: The craft is labour intensive which puts people off learning it. It takes dedication and a lot of time to hone your skills.
  • Raw materials: The paints aren’t as good as they used to be which is becoming an issue.
  • High costs of raw materials and labour: The high cost of the materials and labour compared to the low cost and high speed of computer designed vinyl graphics reduces the number of clients willing to commission work.
  • Training issues: Training in reverse glass sign painting can be expensive
  • Skills issues: some of the allied skills, such as mirror silvering are becoming extremely endangered. The materials used (mainly the Hydfrofluric Acid is extremely toxic and hard to source) puts off most signwriters from engaging more heavily in the skill set.
  • Skills issues: many practitioners do not undertake French Embossing or traditional embossing.  Some will undertake mica embossing which requires the least amount of set up but still produces a beautiful result.
  • Skills issues: this craft originated from very skilled, multi disciplinary business people who could tackle jobs on a commercial scale and to a commercial timetable. The craft is becoming less relevant to business consumers (as it always was) as most of the list of practitioners do not undertake enough of the skills (crucially including framing and installation) as to to be able to offer the craft to all but domestic users.
  • Market issues: there a very few craftspeople who undertake traditional commercial work vital to the survival of the traditional street scene. The vast majority of the list of craftspeople will undertake one off, small scale commissions which involve perhaps signwriting, gilding and some mica embossing, largely but not exclusively, for domestic purposes or a shop window.  Asking craftspeople to produce a 6 metre embossed and gilded fascia sign together with installation and an advertising mirror for the interior of the establishment are almost non existent.

Support organisations

 

 

Craftspeople currently known

Other information

 

 

References

 

Paper making (commercial handmade)

The HCA Red List of Endangered Crafts

 

Paper making (commercial handmade)

 

The hand-forming of paper, often using a mould and deckle to gather and form the sheet (see also studio papermaking).

 

Status Critically endangered
Historic area of significance Japan, India, Vietnam, Thailand, Italy, France, Germany, China
Area currently practised Scotland, England
Origin in the UK 15th Century
Current no. of professionals (main income) 6-10
Current no. of professionals (sideline to main income)
4
Current no. of trainees 2 (see ‘Other information’ for further details)
Current total no. serious amateur makers
n/a
Current total no. of leisure makers
n/a

 

History

The first paper was made around 150 AD in China from plant fibres which were beaten in a pestle and mortar. Papermaking spread to the Islamic world in the eighth century AD, and the earliest use of water-powered pulp mills date from this time. The technique gradually travelled towards Europe providing a substitute to animal skins for writing. Literacy was poor and mainly restricted to religious organisations and the legal profession. Imported paper from Europe, and later the early production of paper in England coincided with Gutenberg’s invention of moveable printing type.

The beating process could be mechanised using redundant water-powered corn mills which were converted wherever the mills were near to towns for easy transportation. Clear spring water was a necessity for making white paper. By this time cotton, linen rags, old rope and canvas were being used as raw material (re-cycling). In the mid-1700s a new improved method of beating the rags into pulp was introduced from Holland improving the beating process, from days, to hours whilst also improving the pulp quality.

The size of the hand mould limited the size of sheet produced unless sheets were glued together. Many people tried to improve the quality and quantity of paper produced but it was not until 1803 that this was successfully achieved at Frogmore Mill. That first machine was rapidly improved and enlarged so that within a few years machines were being sold so that hand papermaking had almost ceased by 1900.

Machine made paper was more consistent and much cheaper. Being made on a roll it could also be used in the new printing presses so that newspapers and books became readily available leading to improved education and literacy. The world of postal communication developed too so that the need for hand-made paper became restricted to speciality papers for artists and for special uses like certificates.

Before World War II there were 5-6 small commercial paper mills around the country, making batches of hand-made paper. Their main market was to produce ledgers for double-entry book keeping. These ledgers were unique to each counting house or company, with their own marbling and watermarks for security. Because the runs were in the hundreds of sheets, rather than the tons, it suited small enterprises. However, electronic banking has changed everything and removed this market. Today, the main market for batch-produced hand-made paper is for fine art and conservation applications.

 

Techniques

Making paper by hand is not that different from making paper by machine. In this context, both commercial and studio paper making is done by hand; the processes of commercial and studio making are largely the same, but the scale of making is different.

Paper is primarily made from cotton and linen flax, but other materials such as hemp, seeds, petals and recycled rag are used to add texture and character. The fibres are first beaten in water and internally sized (to reduce the paper’s tendency when dry to absorb liquid, providing a more consistent, economical, and precise printing, painting, and writing surface.). For coloured paper, lightfast and permanent pigments are added at this stage. The sheets are formed individually using hand moulds and deckles, and then each sheet is laid onto cloth felts and pressed. The paper is then surface sized and left to air dry.

Cellulose fibres are softened and refined to make a paper stock (or stuff) which is added to a vat in a consistency of 1 per cent (- 5 per cent) fibre to 99% water. The vat is stirred and using a wire mesh covered mould, with deckle on top, fibres are scooped from the vat, levelled and gently shaken to form a sheet. This sheet is then couched (a rolling action) onto a felt. The sheets are then placed in a press and once a full post has been transferred, the post is wound down and the sheets pressed to extract water. The sheets can then be handled and are air dried. Sheets may be hand dipped into a further bath of gelatine size if a surface sizing is required. The sheets are the dried again.

 

Local forms

n/a

 

Sub-crafts

Allied crafts:

  • Paper mould and deckle making – now extinct in the UK.
  • Studio paper making

 

Issues affecting the viability of the craft

  • Loss of skills: Hand made papermaking is an inherently variable process, but the measure of craftsmanship is how little variation there is between each making. In a commercial setting/batch-production setting there is very little variation, which takes an enormous level of skill that comes from practice and repeat-making on a larger scale. Furthermore, the treatment of the fibres is all-important in papermaking, but this is a skill that a lot of studio makers do not have because they haven’t been trained in it.
  • Contraction of the mainstream industry: Smaller enterprises rely on the mainstream industry for raw materials such as acid free sizes and cotton linter for pulp – the manufacturers only sell in extreme bulk so smaller enterprises cannot buy materials directly from the manufacturers and instead buy from the mainstream industry (smaller enterprises may then sell materials to studio paper makers who require even smaller quantities). The contraction of the domestic mainstream industry therefore has a knock-on effect on the smaller enterprises.
  • Contraction of the mainstream industry: In the mainstream papermaking industry, people were promoted through the mill and learned from the poeple they were working under and progressed. They were also offered training, e.g. City and Guilds, HNC, HND, and a degree in paper science. However, that infrastructure was dismantled about 25 years ago because the industry couldn’t support/afford it. As the mainstream industry has matured, fewer people are employed, so the pool of talent in the industry is much smaller and many technicians increasingly come from abroad. This also means there are fewer people with the skills who may wish to set up in a more handmade setting.
  • Market issues: Paper is proverbially cheap (‘not worth the paper it’s printed on’) and you are therefore producing something for a market in which people are used to paying very low prices. Most people are not prepared to pay £4 or £5 for a sheet of handmade paper.
  • Market issues: While in some cases you might be making a product that is not available by mass manufacture (such as specialist grades for paper conservation), in many cases you are not creating a new product or a new market and instead have to convince a client that handmade paper is preferable to mass manufactured paper. The market is there, but the challenge lies in reaching it.
  • Market issues: Marketing is a big issue. The market could probably support another 2-3 businesses of 2-3 people around the country, if you were able to market well enough to reach both the domestic and export markets. However, marketing is expensive – but social media is making a noticeable difference.
  • Market issues: demand (painters, textile artists and conservators), willingness to pay the price of a handmade sheet, as opposed to machine made product (requires appreciation of the skilled handmade paper process and the impact of quality on users work)
  • Loss of associated crafts: paper mould making is now extinct in the UK, so it is difficult to acquire moulds if you are setting up a new. Lower quality moulds are available, but they don’t compare with the real thing. There are makers in France and Belgium but no one appears to have taken up the craft in the UK yet. Similarly, wool blankets are the best for transferring marks but it is getting harder to find the right type of blanket.
  • Cost of equipment: To make paper on a commercial basis, you need a beater – these are very rare second hand, and very expensive to buy new – which poses a challenge for anyone setting up in the craft.
  • Supply of raw materials: The price of fibre and chemicals have increased.
  • Cost of premises: Anyone wishing to set up as a commercial paper maker will require suitable premises, which would be prohibitively expensive for anyone learning the craft.
  • Lifestyle: Paper making on a commercial scale is hard physical work, which many people aren’t prepared for nowadays, and often involves subsistence living.

 

Support organisations

  • Paper Industry Technical Association

 

Craftspeople currently known

Business employing two or more makers:

  • Two Rivers Paper Company, Somerset. The largest full-time commercial handmade paper makers, with three craftspeople, Jim Pattison, Neil Hopkins, Zoe Collis and Keiren Berry
  • Frogmore Paper Mill, Hemel Hempstead. Working museum, education and heritage centre, with an archive, makes hand and machine made paper on a 1902 Fourdrinier Machine, with two craftspeople, Gary Fuller and Luke.
  • The Paper Foundation , Cumbria. Took over the business of Griffin Mill in Ireland, and tends to specialist (currently) in papers for conservation work. However, they are talking about branching out to other areas, such as artists’ papers.

 

Other information

An accredited UK paper industry papermaking apprenticeship has been introduced under the Government’s ‘Trailblazers’ initiative. While aimed at the mainstream industry, rather than at hand-making, many of the skills are transferable, and Two Rivers’ Zoe Collis completed the scheme. Zoe was recruited through the Heritage Crafts Association’s 2017 pre-apprenticeship pilot programme funded by the Ernest Cook Trust.

In 2018 industry took advantage of the Trailblazer programme, to set up the paper maker apprenticeship. However,  in 2020 the training providers GEN 2 stopped offering this training because of lack of take up.

References

  • https://www.instagram.com/paper.foundation/
  • www.Tworiverspaper.com
  • Mr.Ed Wallace, Pulp and Paper Information Centre “Papermaking in Britain” 1488 – 1988
  • Sophie Dawson and Silvie Turner Estamp , A Hand Papermaker’s Sourcebook (1995)
  • Ian Sansom, PAPER an elegy  (2012)
  • John Purcell Papers
  • British Association of Paper Historians – Academic Association publishing a journal and numerous books.
  • Hand Papermaking – American organisation publishing a journal of the same name, aimed mainly at hobby and studio market
  • Simon Barcham Green, Simon Barcham Greens Papermaking Moulds
  • Richard L. Hills, Papermaking in Britain 1488 – 1988 (1988)
  • Alfred H. Shorter, Paper Making in the British Isles: an historical and geographical study, (1971)

 

 

Industrial pottery

The HCA Red List of Endangered Crafts

 

Industrial pottery

 

The skilled hand processes required at various stages of the pottery industry (see also studio pottery and clay pipe making)

 

Status Critically endangered
Craft category Clay
Historic area of significance Stoke-on-Trent, Shropshire
Area currently practised Stoke-on-Trent, Shropshire, Wales, Derby
Origin in the UK 17th century
Current no. of professionals (main income) See below
Current no. of professionals (sideline to main income)
Current no. of trainees
Current total no. serious amateur makers
Current total no. of leisure makers
Minimum no. of craftspeople required

 

History

The Staffordshire Potteries is the industrial area encompassing the six towns – Tunstall, Burslem, Hanley, Stoke, Fenton and Longton – that now make up the city of Stoke-on-Trent. The Potteries became a centre of ceramic production in the early 18th century, due to the regional availability of clay, and coal with nearby deposits of lead and salt used for glazing.

Alongside pioneers of the industrial revolution such as Josiah Wedgwood and Spode, the Staffordshire potteries in the late 19th c comprised of hundreds of relatively small factories with more than 2,000 kilns firing millions of products a year. By 1938 half the workforce of Stoke-on-Trent worked in pottery factories with employment peaking in 1948 to an estimated 79000 people. Other centres of production emerged in Shropshire, Derby and South Wales but Staffordshire remained a key centre of global production way into the 20th Century.

The Staffordshire Potteries still remain a centre of UK ceramic production despite its reduction due to the impact of global economics. Outsourcing and new technologies have displaced many traditional crafts practiced in the industry. However, some historic processes, such as flower making, china painting and clay pipe making, are carried out within heritage settings in Stoke, Shropshire and Wales.

 

Techniques

The techniques used in industrial pottery are varied and highly specialised. They range from historic hand skills to mechanised and semi-mechanised processes. See ‘Sub-crafts’ and ‘Issues affecting the viability of the craft’ below.

 

Local forms

n/a

 

Sub-crafts

Design

  • ‘Hand-fitting’ and ‘styling-up’

Modelling

  • Tableware
  • Figurine
  • Relief

Mould making

  • Blockers/casers
  • Production mould makers

Production – making (plastic clay)

  • Throwers
  • Turners
  • Flatware pressers
  • Hand jiggering
  • Hollow Ware pressing
  • Hand Jolleying

Production – hand casting

  • Bench casters

Production – Automated (personnel manning machines)

  • Machine casting
  • Pressure casting
  • Dust pressing

Decoration (clay)

  • Agate, thrown/laid
  • Slip decoration (Marbling/trailing/dipped)
  • Scraffito
  • Pate-sur-Pate
  • Flower makers
  • Figure makers – (sprig maker)
  • Ornamentors (sprig application)
  • Engine-turned decoration (including dicing and rouletting)
  • Piercing
  • Tubelining
  • Tubeline decorator/ painter

Decoration (underglaze)

  • Copperplate engraving
  • Printing (flat/roller engravings)
  • Tissue transferrers
  • Painting
  • Banding/lining
  • Lithography

Decoration (on glaze)

  • Gilding – including raised paste and jewelling
  • Painting (enamel)
  • Banding/lining
  • Ground laying
  • Acid etching

Historic processes

  • Saggar making
  • Clay pipe making

Issues affecting the viability of the craft

Endangered Industrial Pottery Skills Research – INITIAL FINDINGS

Research is currently being carried out by the Heritage Crafts Association in partnership with Staffordshire University. The aim of the project is to survey existing skills and knowledge and then to develop a series of recommendations to preserve and promote these skills as embedded within our intangible cultural heritage. The first stage of the research is to survey the sector and this will be followed up with a skills symposium at the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery during the British Ceramics Biennial in October 2021. This research is ongoing but at the time of writing (May 2021), 20 practising ceramicists and ceramics businesses had participated in the research.

 

For the purposes of this research, these skills are distinct from those of studio pottery, which is a thriving craft.

 

Process Personnel still practising

(These figures include practitioners in the surveyed businesses and estimated numbers based on industry expertise)

Issues affecting the viability/sustainability of the craft in the UK industry e.g. market issues, training and recruitment issues, shortages of raw materials, lack of demand for products/skills etc.
Design ‘Hand-fitting’ and ‘styling-up’ 20
  • Decline in skills and material understanding
  • Lack of training opportunities and work experience within industrial settings
  • Reduction in higher education courses that specialise in industrial design.
Modelling: tableware, figurine, relief

 

22
  • CAD and 3d printing are now widely used in the production of models
  • The majority of modelling work is outsourced to a dwindling number of free-lance makers
  • Decline in skills and material understanding
  • Decline in the use of clay and other creative activities in schools leading to a loss of haptic skills and material understanding
Mould making: blockers/casers, production mould makers 17
  • These skills are industry led and it is difficult to find advanced training or learn the skills outside of an industrial pottery setting
  • Mould making is outsourced to a dwindling number of free-lance makers
  • As many mould makers are free-lance, it is less likely that skills are passed on to the next generation of makers
Production – making (plastic clay) Throwers 5
  • Many of these processes have been replaced by automated equipment
  • Some heritage companies are continuing the skills but in a very limited capacity
  • The majority of production now happens overseas

 

Turners 5
Flatware pressers 0
Hand jiggering 2
Hollow Ware pressing 1
Hand Jolleying 4
Production – hand casting

Bench casters

 

 

36
  • Most factories will still employ bench casters
  • ·Work can be repetitive and so some companies (e.g. Denby) are upskilling staff into different processes and ensuring they can work in other areas of the business

 

Production – Automated (personnel manning machines)

Machine casting

Pressure casting

Dust pressing

40
  • High investment in equipment and so needs a high volume of production to be viable
  • Most work will now be off-shored
Decoration (clay) Agate, thrown/laid 0
  • Many of these techniques are difficult to implement due to the increased cost, and so lower cost techniques are used
  • Many of these techniques are seen as niche and take time to learn and perfect
  • Could be seen as a non-contemporary aesthetic and less relevant for a younger generation
  • Some of these skills, such as slip decoration and scraffito, will be used more in a studio setting
Slip decoration (Marbling/trailing/

dipped)

1
Scraffito 2
Pate-sur-Pate 1
Flower makers

(6 of these are in the heritage sector)

7
Figure makers – (sprig maker) 2
Ornamentors (sprig application) 5
Engine-turned decoration (including dicing and rouletting) 1
Piercing 2
Tubelining 3
Tubeline decorator/ painter 3
Decoration (underglaze) Copperplate engraving 2
  • Some of these skills, particularly knowledge of print, are built up over many years and are difficult to replace.
  • These are often high cost processes and are used for high-end products. As processes are streamlined the quality is gradually eroded.
  • Hand painting skills have largely been replaced with lower cost transfers
  • It is difficult to find trainees with the right aptitude for the job
  • The risk of losing these skills is high

 

Printing (flat/roller engravings) 1
Tissue transferrers 28
Painting

(66 of these are in one business)

69
Banding/lining 2
Pad printers 2
Decoration (on glaze) Gilding – including raised paste and jewelling 15
  • These are seen as highly skilled roles and it can be problematic to replace skills as makers retire
  • The techniques take time to perfect and learn with experienced makers
  • These are often high cost processes and are used for high-end, prestige products

 

Painting (enamel) 12
Banding/lining 9
Ground laying 1
Acid etching 0
Historic processes Saggar making 0 Saggar making is now obsolete
Clay pipe making 4

 

Key issues for the sector

  • Ageing practitioners – many are beyond retirement age.
  • Outsourcing of work to a dwindling pool of free-lance experts. As they are self-employed, these makers are unlikely to have the capacity or resources to train the next generation
  • Lack of training opportunities and work experience
  • Some of the potteries employ a token workforce to demonstrate the heritage of the skills while outsourcing the majority of their production to low-wage economies in other countries. This can give a misleading sense of the health of the crafts.
  • Some of the current practitioners have been kept on as demonstrators by heritage organisations such as the Gladstone Pottery Museum and the Ironbridge Gorge Museum, keeping the skills alive but in a precarious state due to reliance on public funding in place of a sustainable market.
  • Rapid decline of the Staffordshire Potteries: The potteries have lost a number of companies and hundreds of jobs over recent years, posing a series threat to the legacy of industrial ceramics skills.

 

Support organisations

  • Clay College
  • Gladstone Pottery Museum
  • Spode Museum Trust Heritage Centre
  • Staffordshire University
  • Gladstone Pottery Museum
  • Middleport Pottery
  • Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust
  • Nant Garw China Works & Museum

 

Craftspeople currently known

 

Businesses

N.B. These are all industrial ceramics but not all will be using hand skills and some will be outsourcing work to free-lance specialists.

  • Staffordshire Heritage Fine China
  • Denby
  • Nant Gawr China Works
  • Edwards and Locket
  • Moorland
  • Caverswall China
  • Heraldic
  • Emma Bridgewater
  • Brunswicks
  • Wades
  • Adderley Ceramics
  • Burgess and Leigh
  • Burslem Pottery
  • Cauldon Ceramics
  • Finsbury China
  • Heron Cross Pottery
  • Pollyana – Walpole Fine Bone china
  • 1882 Ltd
  • Royal Crown Derby
  • Wedgwood – Fiskars Corporation
  • Portmerion
  • Duchess
  • Ceramics by Design https://www.ceramicsbydesign.co.uk
  • Dunoon Mugs
  • Foley Pottery
  • Churchhill China
  • Moorcroft
  • Peregrin Pottery
  • Repeat Repeat – design
  • Johnson Tiles
  • Global Bisque
  • E. Smith
  • Milton China
  • Royal Stafford
  • Steelite
  • Topaz China
  • William Edwards
  • Ceramics 77 – mould making

 

Other information

 

 

References