I've always had the drive to create things, but I never handled real clay as a kid. Put air-dry clay in my hands and I'd make something, but it wasn't very satisfying (since, as it turns out, surface decoration is really the focus of my inspiration). Not until my senior year of high school did I handle real clay, but by then I had already decided that I was going to pursue a career in photography. Clay was always something I was competent at but never thought much of. Years later I'd completed photography school, saved up for years to buy the studio equipment and found myself with no idea what I wanted to do with it. Eventually I decided to give clay a real chance since I knew it was something I could do. I started up with classes, and moved my way through other programs and studio spaces within the Clay Studio in Philadelphia until I felt I had outgrown it. My partner and I moved into a house with a basement large enough for a studio, and now its in full swing! And I finally figured out what to use my photography equipment for.
Logical Hue ceramics are made from stoneware clay, employing both wheel throwing and hand-building methods, carved free-hand, and glazed by brushing.