The Potter's Bible

Marylin Scott

Pages

192

Year

2006

Difficulty

Easy

Themes

pottery basics, hand-building, wheel throwing, glazing, kiln firing, clay types

The definitive beginner’s reference for pottery, covering every major technique from hand-building to wheel throwing, glazing, and firing. Scott’s visual, step-by-step approach makes this the book most often recommended to people who want to learn ceramics from scratch.

Why Start Here

The Potter’s Bible earns its name by covering the full breadth of the craft in a single, well-organized volume. Scott walks you through clay types (earthenware, stoneware, porcelain), forming methods (pinching, coiling, slab construction, wheel throwing), surface decoration (sgraffito, stamping, burnishing), glazing, and firing. Each technique is illustrated with clear photographs that show the key moments rather than overwhelming you with unnecessary steps.

The spiral binding means you can lay the book flat on your workbench, which is exactly how you will use it. This practical touch reflects the book’s overall approach: everything is designed for someone who is actually working with clay, not just reading about it.

What to Expect

At 192 pages, this is substantial enough to serve as a reference you return to as your skills grow, but approachable enough to read cover to cover as a beginner. Scott also covers workspace setup, tool selection, and kiln basics, saving you from the common mistakes that come with starting a new craft without guidance. Published in 2006, the fundamentals have not changed.

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