Decorating faience by hand

All hands on clay

Embossing, throwing, decorating, cooking…

All the steps required to create faience are done by hand within our Atelier Soleil workshop in Moustiers.
The master faience maker Franck Scherer of Atelier Soleil at work

Working the clay

Carefully selected by the Atelier Soleil for its lightness and purity, the natural clay is worked by hand only, according to three traditional methods.

Embossing. Flat pieces are shaped by embossing: a thin layer of clay is applied on a potter’s wheel and molded by hand, after which some festoons can be added.

Throwing. This technique is required for vases and pitchers. Placed squarely on a wheel, a lump of clay is quickly transformed by the potter’s hands. Handles or other festoons are later added, using liquid clay called “barbotine” as glue.

Molding. Some shapes are too intricate to be embossed or thrown, so the faience maker has to mold them. Made of plaster, molds are filled with barbotine and then left to dry.

Mastering the alchemy

The decorator always draws freehand, on “raw” glaze, according to models created by the Atelier Soleil. The paint consists of different metallic oxides mixed in with water. They determine the final colors: copper for green, iron for yellow, cobalt for blue, etc.

But it is a delicate alchemy: oxides are applied with thin brushes and the powdery glaze absorbs them instantly. The decorator’s hand must always be steady as the slightest mistake would translate into a blotch and ruin the piece!
Fine brushes and metal oxides to decorate earthenware faience

Mastering the alchemy

The decorator always draws freehand, on “raw” glaze, according to models created by the Atelier Soleil. The paint consists of different metallic oxides mixed in with water. They determine the final colors: copper for green, iron for yellow, cobalt for blue, etc.

But it is a delicate alchemy: oxides are applied with thin brushes and the powdery glaze absorbs them instantly. The decorator’s hand must always be steady as the slightest mistake would translate into a blotch and ruin the piece!
Faience after firing, with the signature from Atelier Soleil

Firing the faience

Faience is fired twice: once to cook the dried clay, or “biscuit”, and a second time to vitrify the glaze through heat fusion for a smooth, glasslike finish.

Firing of the biscuit. Once shaped and dried, clay pieces are fired in the kiln at 1,020 degrees Celsius. The clay hardens into a “biscuit”, which is dipped by hand into a glaze bath using special pincers.

Firing of the glaze. The decorated (or plain white glazed) biscuit is ready for a second firing at 960 degrees Celsius, fusion temperature of the glaze. So as not to fuse with each other, pieces stand apart, with plates balanced on three small wedges that leave distinctive marks underneath (photo).

The faience maker at work

The potter’s wheel

The glaze bath

Freehand painting

In the kiln

The master’s words

Faience is an art with its own language: here are some key words to help you decipher what the master faience maker is saying.
Barbotine: White liquid clay used to glue together faience parts before cooking, for example a loop or a teapot spout.

Biscuit: Faience after a first cooking at 1,020 degrees Celsius. The clay is then hardened but still porous, ocher in color. The biscuit is then plunged in a glaze bath.

Glazing: Once cooked, the biscuit is plunged in a glaze bath using pincers: it absorbs the glaze instantly so the faience maker must move fast. At this point, the piece is ready to be decorated before its second cooking, which will vitrify the glaze.

Faience: earthenware covered on the front and back with white glaze. The term comes from the Italian town of Faenza, which became famous for its ceramic production in the Renaissance. Earthenware faience is one of the oldest techniques used in ceramics.

Solanée flower: Typical design in the Moustiers tradition, consisting of symmetrical bouquets of three or four flowers around a central motif.

Grotesque: Decoration introduced in Moustiers tradition by Joseph Olérys (1697-1749), inspired by various scenes and performers from the Commedia dell’Arte.

“Petit feu”: Literally, small fire. Technique consisting in painting on cooked glaze, with a third firing at a lower temperature. A delicate process that delivers very bright colors.

“Poncif”: Tracing paper that is sometimes used by decorators. The lines of a drawing are perforated with tiny holes on the tracing paper, which is then applied to the piece and lightly tapped with a pouch filled with carbon powder, revealing an outline for the painter to follow. This traditional technique goes back to the 18th century and should not be confused with industrial chromolithography.

A question?

The Atelier Soleil answers you at +33 (0)4 92 74 61 62

Histories of faience

Thanks to its abundant water, wood, and clay resources, Moustiers was a land of plenty for potters before becoming France’s faience capital from the late 17th to the early 19th century.

The first major potter in the village, Pierre Clérissy, started work around 1680, and he brought with him the secret of enamel ceramics. He created the Bérain design, inspired by the drawings of Jean Bérain, an artist at the court of Louis XIV. Moustiers faience took off during the Sun King’s reign: to finance his wars, he requisitioned all silverware in the kingdom, which had to be replaced by a refined tableware. Moustiers faience became a royal treat.

Other famous Moustiers faience makers include Joseph Olérys, who introduced polychromy, and the Ferrat brothers, who specialized in the delicate technique of “petit feu”, a way of obtaining brilliant colors through low-temperature cooking.

Faience production declined after the French Revolution and the last kiln was extinguished in 1873. But in 1925, Marcel Joannon, better known as Marcel Provence, rekindled the faience fire in Moustiers. Others soon followed, among them the artist and faience maker Simone Garnier, who inspired a new generation of Moustiers potters.

Source: Moustiers Academy.
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