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Helter Skelter

  • Writer: wendydiamond20
    wendydiamond20
  • May 21, 2021
  • 1 min read

Updated: Jul 9, 2021

I’ve always been fascinated by slides and helter skelters. Not riding them you understand, but just how they are constructed. I had an idea to construct a herb wheel with a difference.

The question was how to create a helter skelter with walls of increasing or decreasing height. After doing a bit of reading I now know that the construction relies on a form of 3D engineering using vectors, which I never understood at school. So, armed with very little knowledge I embarked on the unusual scissors and paper exercise. I copied the shapes on to four separate clay pieces which I draped over different dimensions of cylinders until they took on the curved form. Then I created a base for it to stand on and constructed the piece. I’ve used terra cotta clay which is good to handle once it is dry enough. Contamination with other clays in the studio is a challenge so tools need to be super clean and surfaces scrubbed. Sometimes I think I spend more time cleaning than potting!

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Realising a Dream..

This is me. Setting out on my journey as a hobbyist potter.

Pottery was an ‘add on’ O level course when I was at school, only offered in the sixth form. In to studying Music and RE to A level, I embarked on pottery ‘O’ level as a bit of light relief. I loved it although I was never particularly good at it. I made a few pots, mainly handbuilding using slabbing and coiling but didn’t really learn much.

What I wanted to do more than anything was throw on the wheel – the school did have a wheel but no one was allowed near it unless they knew what they were doing… an interesting approach to the process of acquiring skill methinks. I do have one of my very first pots – rather crude really, but its mine, with my initials ‘scrauped’ on the base. Over the intervening years, of which there were many, I watched the art of throwing from a distance, always hoping that one day it would happen.


We had bought our little cottage in Halifax in 2009. Six years later the adjoining house became available so we set about creating a home by combining the two halves. The ‘under-dwelling’, a feature of a number of houses in that area of West Yorkshire was a real gem; we converted into a pottery studio for me and there began my journey. I enrolled on a course in Springhead. Oldham and my amazingly talented pottery teacher, Sue Devine gave me one-to-one tuition in throwing. I bought a pottery wheel and was given a small kiln. My journey had begun – 40 years later!

Twelve month ago, my partner and I moved to Newport in South Wales. I am most fortunate have a pottery studio here. Why Andante Ceramics? Well, I work slowly, I go with the flow, I create no deadlines for my self. My world of clay is completely self-asbsorbing and tomorrow, if I am fortunate to have one, is another day.

My media pages give a flavour of what I do and my blog documents my thoughts as I journey through the wonderful world of pottery and ceramics. I wont sell any of my work but I delight in making pieces specifically for friends; I love the challenge that creating bespoke pieces bring. If you would like me to make something special do please ask.

Wendy Diamond

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