Drying: The Patience of Greenware

Photo: Beth Macdonald / Unsplash
An unfired, fully shaped pot is called “greenware,” and it is surprisingly fragile — as delicate as a dry biscuit. Before firing, every trace of moisture must leave the clay, and that has to happen slowly and evenly.
If one part dries faster than another, the pot can crack or warp as it shrinks. So makers dry pieces under cloth or plastic, slowing the process, letting handles and thick bases catch up with thin walls. It can take days, and it cannot be rushed.
This stage teaches a lesson the whole craft keeps repeating: good work takes the time it takes. A pot hurried through drying will betray it later, in the heat of the kiln.