Communal Clay
Mono Printing + Surface Design Workshop
Mono Printing is a ceramics surface design technique. Where a single use image made from slip is transferred onto a clay surface.
In this workshop you will make be given a clay slab to turn into a tile, dish, plate or wall hanging. You will design, paint or draw an image / pattern using slip onto paper to be transferred onto the ceramic work you have made.
This will result in the ceramic object having a unique surface featuring the mono printed imagery made.
The session will last 2 hours.
Theses workshops will be more focused on the tactility of playing, practicing and learning sculpture techniques. There is no pressure to make a ‘finished product’ or ‘perfect piece’
At the end of the workshop if you wish to have your piece fired and glazed, we ask you pay an additional £10 to cover firing costs, glaze materials & transport of your work.
Any leftover clay at the end of the session will be recycled for future use, minimising wastage and keeping our workshops sustainable.
Pricing:
We are updating our pricing scale, in an effort to continue to make our workshops accessible and affordable we are testing out a new ticketing format with two options: Standard and Concession tickets.
Please choose the ticket option that is appropriate for yourself.
Communal Clay CIC is a not-for-profit organisation, all profits made after covering core costs will be used to run more community workshops.
Concessions Include:
-People receiving benefits Jobseeker's Allowance / Universal Credit / Housing Benefit
-Young people 16-21
-Disabled
-students from working class backgrounds
-carers
-single parents
All fired and glazed work will be ready to collect in 2-4 weeks from SET Social.
PLEASE READ: Clay and ceramics are fragile materials until fired and glazed, on occasion things can break or become damaged during the drying and firing process', Communal Clay is not responsible for any damage that may occur during these.

This workshop is supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England.