
For throwers who are confident with centring, throwing, and trimming. The basics aren't covered here. Eight sessions on collaring, belly shapes, plates, advanced trimming, and personal projects.
This is not a beginner course. You need to be confident with centring, throwing cylinders and bowls, and trimming before signing up. Those techniques aren't covered. The eight weeks are for working into more complex forms and refining your control at the wheel.
The course is tutor-led but self-directed. Your teacher introduces new techniques each week and works with you individually, but there's room to pursue your own ideas too. You can suggest techniques you'd like to focus on.
Tuition, clay, a selection of our studio glazes, and use of studio equipment are included. Firing is the only thing charged separately, at £2.50 per 500g, which works out at around £2 per piece. Aprons are provided. You can bring your own tools or pick up our eight-piece starter toolkit at the studio for £5.

Surface treatments
Decorative work done before glazing: slip, sgraffito, carving, stamping, or burnishing. These add texture, pattern, or contrast that the glaze then interacts with in the kiln.
Layering
Applying one glaze over another to create a surface different to either glaze alone. The result depends on the chemistry of both glazes and how thickly each is applied.
Advanced glaze application
Glazing methods that go beyond basic dipping. Brushing, pouring, layering, and combining glazes to control where and how the surface develops in the kiln.
Bisque preparation
Getting your pieces ready for their first firing. Final trimming, signing the base, and making sure each piece is bone-dry and crack-free before it goes in the kiln.
Foot rings
The raised ring on the base of a thrown piece. Trimmed from a thicker base once the clay is leather-hard, the foot ring lifts the piece off the surface and gives it a finished underside.
Final trimming
The last pass before bisque firing. Sharpening foot rings, checking wall thickness, and making any last adjustments to the form while the clay is still workable.
Advanced trimming
Trimming complex forms like bottles and vases, where the foot needs to balance a tall or curved body. Done at leather-hard, often with the piece held upside down on a chuck.
Wide-form centring
Centring a larger volume of clay across a wider base than you would for a cylinder or bowl. Harder to feel because the centre of mass sits further from the wheel head.
Throwing batts
Removable wooden or composite discs that fit onto the wheel head. Wide, flat, or fragile forms get thrown on a batt so they can be lifted off without distorting before they've stiffened.
Platters
Larger and lower than plates, with a flat or shallow centre and a defined rim. The wider footprint makes them harder to centre and harder still to lift off the wheel intact.
Plates
One of the hardest forms to throw well. The wider, flatter shape tests your centring and wall control in a different way to cylinders or bowls. Usually thrown on a batt so it can be lifted without warping.
Belly shapes
Forms that swell outward through the middle before tapering at the top. You control the clay's outward curve from the inside, a different challenge to collaring inward.
Bottle shapes
Thrown forms with a narrow neck and wider body. Building one needs control of collaring throughout the throw so the shoulder and neck come out in proportion.
Collaring
Narrowing the opening of a thrown form by squeezing inward as it spins. The technique works against the clay's tendency to widen and is the foundation of bottles, vases, and any enclosed shape.
Glaze introduction
An overview of the glazes we keep in the studio and how to choose ones that suit your work.
Cups
Cups build on the cylinder. Same throwing technique, with extra attention to wall thickness for comfortable handling and a clean rim for drinking.
Wax resist
Applying wax to areas you want to keep glaze-free, creating patterns and contrast between glazed and unglazed surfaces.
Glaze application
Dipping, brushing, and pouring. Each method produces different results. You’ll test on sample tiles before committing to your pieces.
Sgraffito
Scratching through a layer of slip to reveal the clay colour beneath. A simple technique that produces beautiful, graphic results.
Decorating with slips
Coloured liquid clay applied to the surface before firing. You can brush, pour, dip, or trail it for different effects.
Pulling handles
Pulling handles from a lump of clay and attaching them to mugs and jugs. A satisfying skill that takes your thrown work to the next level.
Hump moulds
Using plaster forms to shape consistent pieces. Useful for plates, shallow bowls, and repeatable shapes.
Trimming & turning
Once your thrown pieces have dried slightly, you’ll flip them over on the wheel to refine the shape, add foot rings, and clean up the base.
Bowls
Opening out from a centred lump into wider, shallower forms. Different hand positions and a different feel to cylinders.
Cylinders
The foundation form. Mugs, vases, and tumblers all start as cylinders. You’ll learn to pull walls up evenly and control thickness.
Centring
The essential first step. Getting a lump of clay perfectly steady on a spinning wheel. It takes practice, and your teacher will work with you until it clicks.
Joining & scoring
Scoring, slipping, and assembling separate pieces of clay. The fundamentals of making anything with more than one part.
Slab building
Rolling flat sheets of clay and assembling them into structure. Boxes, planters, angular forms that the wheel can’t produce.
Coiling
Building walls ring by ring for larger forms. You’ll learn to roll consistent coils and join them securely to create pots, vases, and sculptural pieces.
Pinching
The simplest and oldest forming method. You’ll make a small vessel entirely by pinching the clay walls thinner. It teaches you how clay responds to pressure.
Tools & materials
What each tool does and when to reach for it. Ribs, wire cutters, trimming tools, sponges, and more.
Studio safety & etiquette
Dust management, safe use of equipment, kiln protocols, and keeping your workspace clean. We take this seriously because ceramic dust is no joke.
Wedging
Learning to condition clay by hand, pushing, folding, and working it until it’s smooth and free of air bubbles. This is how every session starts.
The course assumes you can already throw cylinders and bowls. Each week introduces a new advanced technique, with the shorter format focusing on the techniques most worth learning at this stage.
Week 1
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Your first session covers studio health and safety, then your tutor will discuss what you want to work on over the eight weeks. You'll start your first project throwing bottle shapes.
Studio safety|Goal setting|Bottle shapes
Weeks 2–4
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Across three weeks you'll work on your own projects while your tutor introduces advanced techniques as you go: collaring, belly shapes, plates, advanced trimming, and any specific forms you've asked to work on.
Collaring|Bottle shapes|Belly shapes|Plates|Advanced trimming|Personal projects
Week 5
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Week 5 is your last chance to start new pieces. After this session you can still practise on the wheel, but any new work won't make it through the firing schedule.
Week 6
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This session is about getting your pots ready for bisque firing. Final trimming, tidying foot rings, and finishing each piece to a standard you're happy with. All work must be in the queue by the end of the session.
Final trimming · Foot rings · Bisque preparation
Weeks 7-8
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The final two sessions focus on glazing. Your tutor will share application techniques that go beyond basic dipping, including layering, wax resist, and surface treatments that suit the more complex forms you've been making. Fired work is ready to collect around two to three weeks after the course ends.
Advanced glaze application|Wax resist|Layering|Surface treatments
Your fired pieces will be ready to collect from the studio approximately two to three weeks after the course ends.
Choose a time and location that works for you. Every 8-week intermediate throwing course covers the same curriculum, taught by the same teaching team.
New dates are released regularly. Leave your email and we'll tell you the moment the next one is announced.
No spam. Just new dates, roughly once a month.
Looking for something sooner?
View all classesArriving on time
Please arrive 10 minutes early.
Each session opens with foundational techniques that everything else builds on. It's hard to catch up if you've missed that groundwork, and disruptive to others once the class is underway.
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What to bring
An apron, old shoes, pen & paper, a towel.
An apron (synthetic is better than cotton, as it traps less clay dust). Shoes you don't mind getting earthy. A pen and paper for notes, as there's a lot to absorb in the early weeks. A small towel for drying your hands between steps. Clay, glazes, and equipment are all provided. If you booked with the starter toolkit, your tools will be waiting for you. If not, you'll need to bring your own.
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Clay dust and your health
A genuine concern, not studio fussiness.
Long-term exposure to clay dust can cause silicosis, a serious lung condition. We ask everyone to wipe their work area with a damp sponge throughout the session and mop the floor around their space at the end. Clearing up is part of the session, not an afterthought.
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Attending your sessions
Get the dates in your calendar before you book.
Please carefully check all the class dates on the course to make sure that you are able to attend all your lessons. Unfortunately, it is not possible to reschedule any missed lessons or join lessons on another course. Our classes run at full capacity and on different lesson schedules.
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Firing and collecting
Work must enter the queue 3 weeks before your final session.
We fire your pots as they're ready, but the process takes time. Pieces made after the 3-week cutoff can be taken home as bisque (structurally hardened but unglazed). There's a small charge per piece: £2.50 per 500g of unfired clay, paid by card. Finished pieces are available roughly 2 weeks after your final session. We hold student pots for 1 month after the final lesson. Please make sure you collect them before then.
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If this is your first time
Most people are a little nervous. That's normal.
You won't be the only one. Our instructors are used to working with complete beginners, and there's no performance involved. Just clay, time, and a room full of people in the same position as you. Long hair needs tying back, and long nails will make wheel-throwing noticeably harder.
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Two students on what their 8-week intermediate throwing course was actually like.
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8-week wheel throwing
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8-week wheel throwing
Makers who started here
Each of them started with a beginners course with no particular plan to take it further. The wheel got them hooked, and they kept going. Now they're working makers with their own practice.
Andrea Roman
AR Ceramics
Started on a 12-week course in 2015. Now sells tableware through independent stockists across London and online.
@ar_ceramicsSayaka Namba
Sayaka Ceramics
Joined as a complete beginner in 2014. Exhibited at the London Design Festival and now supplies restaurants and cafés.
@sayakaceramicsBen Sutton
Ben Sutton Ceramics
Took his first class in 2015, became a member, and now runs a ceramics practice from his own studio in East London.
@bensuttonceramicsKat Evans
Kat Evans Pottery
Went from an evening course to a work-exchange position to running her own line of hand-built vessels and planters.
@katevansceramicsJono Smart
Jono Smart
Began on a beginners course and developed a distinctive style of bold, graphic ceramics now stocked in galleries nationwide.
@jonosmart