Anagama Firing Schedule + Registration
The Spring 2025 Anagama Firing is scheduled for May,9-11; Unloading on May 17.
How to Register
Interest in our anagama firings is high, so participation is determined in advance by a lottery. Approximately 2 months before our twice-yearly firings, we hold the lottery and alert the participants. Click the button below to join the lottery. Signing up does NOT guarantee you a place in the firing. You are just putting your name in the hat. You will be notified about the lottery results shortly after the sign-up deadline. If you get a spot, you will register and pay the workshop fee at that time.
The lottery sign-up deadline for the Spring 2025 Firing is February 28, 2025.
There are 15 available spaces for the firing, out of 25 total participants (10 are invited seasoned wood-firers: experienced people who have been chosen to help each shift go smoothly so that everyone will have a fun and safe firing with beautiful pieces to take home).
If you would like an email reminder before the deadline of each future Anagama lottery, sign up here.
Cost
If you win the participation lottery, there is a $125 participation fee for the Anagama Firing, which includes up to 2000 cubic inches of space in the kiln. There is a 25¢ per cubic inch fee for extra pieces, if we can fit them in.
Note: This event is open to the public. If you simply want to attend in order to watch and learn, you may do so for free, but you must arrange your visit in advance with the Hambidge office at office@hambidge.org or 706-746-7324.
Accommodations
There is space on the lawn for free camping and plenty of hotels nearby in Dillard and Clayton. Click here for a list of nearby accommodations. Contact the office at office@hambidge.org to arrange for camping on Hambidge property.
The Firing
Led by Vernon Smith, we will start glazing and loading on Friday at 9:00AM. Firing will begin that evening and continue through Sunday afternoon.
All participants are expected to measure, glaze and wad their own pieces, help with the loading, as well as take at least one shift stoking wood and to help move and stack firewood. The day of the pick up, everyone is expected to help unload the kiln, scrape kiln shelves, put away tools and glazes as well as stack firewood for the next firing. When there are many hands, it is not too much work for anyone.
As a general guide, participants should bring at least 2000 cubic inches of work to fire (HxWxD). Platters and large bowls are discouraged, but there’s usually plenty of room for cylindrical shapes under 9". All your work may not get in, but every effort is made to be fair with the available space. There will be glazes available (celadon, tenmoku and shinos), as well as some flashing slips to glaze your pieces before loading. Please feel free to bring some of your own Cone 10 glazes to experiment with. Needless to say, your pieces must be made with Cone 10 clay and bisque fired.
Click here to learn more about the history of our kiln.
SCHEDULE
Firing Weekend
Friday
9:00AM - Begin glazing and stacking, sign up for a shift
6:00PM - Propane burner; Later that evening start wood stoking
Saturday
ALL DAY - Stoking, stoking, and more stoking until cone 10 is down
Sunday
3pm - Finish stoking and brick up door
Unloading Weekend (the following weekend)
Saturday
10:00AM - Un-brick door, clean firebox and unload pieces. Clean-up, scrape shelves, general cleaning of studio and grounds
[+] Answers to All Your Questions
Why does it start so early?
Whew! We have a lot to do to get the kiln loaded and ready to fire. A three day firing is actually a pretty quick pace, but since everyone needs to measure, then glaze, then put wadding on their pots, and then help load lots of kiln shelves, it’s usually 6:00 pm on Friday before the kiln is lit. We want to give the pots as much fire and ash as we can before everyone has to go home.
What kind of clay should I use?
You MUST use a clay body that is rated to cone 10. If you have something you are not sure about, remember that if your pot explodes, it could ruin a lot of other people’s work. There's always something that breaks, but why increase the odds? If you have an experimental glaze or clay, please save it for your own firing.
Do I have to bisque fire my pieces?
YES! You MUST bisque fire your pieces. Despite the precedent set around the world with once-fired ceramics, there is a lot that can go wrong with greenware. So, to keep everyone's work safe and happy, it all has to be bisqued before it gets to go into the anagama.
What glazes will be available?
Glazes can vary from firing to firing depending on available materials and budget, as well as how much is left over of a particular glaze from the last firing or whether or not one was successful. You can count on a variety of shino and celadon glazes and a few flashing slips to be there, as well as a few experimental ones that very kind people bring for you to try.
Can I pick where my pieces go?
It seems like everyone has “the place” they want their pieces to go. In order to be fair, we will have special “markers” for your pieces. When you turn in your measurements and payment, you will get ONE marker to put on the piece you want to have in the front few rows (this is not a guarantee but we’ll do our best), and there will be markers for pieces that HAVE to go in the back (but you have to get them ready BEFORE the back is loaded!). Everything else will go where it fits best. To be fair to everyone, if you show up late in the day with lots of stuff, you may not get your work in the kiln at all...the earlier arrivals who have been working all day will have their work placed before yours.
What do I have to do during the firing?
All participants are expected to measure, glaze and wad their own pieces, as well as take at least one shift stoking the kiln and to help move and stack firewood during the day on the firing weekend. During your shift, you must stoke wood and keep hourly notes of what you are doing in the kiln log. On the following weekend, everyone is expected to help unload the kiln, scrape kiln shelves, and help put away tools and glazes as well as stack firewood for the next firing. When there are many hands, the work is light. Just jump in and lend a hand.
Am I required to chop and move wood?
Move...yes. Everyone has to pull their weight in this regard, though there are usually enough hands present to make it a fun “wood brigade” for about 15 minutes at a time. You’re not required to cut wood, but we'd like you to if you’re able.
Am I expected to clean up at the kiln opening and unloading?
Yes, the least fun part of wood firing is cleaning up the kiln wash, melted glaze and ash from the kiln shelves, and stacking everything back in place. But if everyone helps, it doesn’t take long. You should bring a dust mask (preferably a respirator type), safety glasses, work gloves, and kneepads are nice for kneeling in the kiln. If you have an angle grinder - with MASONRY grinding discs - please bring that along.
What does my registration fee cover?
Your fee buys glaze materials, firebrick, kiln shelves, firewood, grinding discs, chainsaw chains, and propane, plus the time and talent of the workshop leader.
If I don't have anything to fire, can I come anyway?
Yes! Observers are welcome, but you must arrange your visit in advance with the Hambidge office at office@hambidge.org or 706-746-7324.
What are the facilities like at Hambidge?
The hard truth is...port-o-potty for all involved...unless you have a nearby hotel room to drive back to. So bring your handy wipes and be courteous of your wood firing compatriots. There is also a lack of parking at the kiln site, so everyone will be expected to leave their cars at the bottom of the hill unless they are being used to haul wood or as a pottery shuttle. There is electrical power at the kiln and in the glaze studio. There is pure spring water and a sink available, but no hot water. Usually someone brings a coffee maker or an electric kettle, and we all bring snacks to share. You are welcome to hike the many Hambidge trails, but the studios/cabins of the Hambidge artists-in-residence and the other buildings are off limits, unless a resident has personally invited you in advance to visit.
Where can I stay?
There are several places to stay near the Hambidge Center. Find a list here. Contact our office at office@hambidge.org to make arrangements to camp on Hambidge propoerty.
Is camping allowed?
Yes! Several of us have spent one or more nights in our cars or in pitched tents...though it’s nice to have a shower to go to after a long smoky shift.
How do I get there?
The address is 105 Hambidge Court, Rabun Gap GA 30568. It is located in the NE corner of GA, just north of Clayton, GA and south of Franklin NC.
Please note: For everyone’s safety, NO alcohol is allowed while on shift or during the two hours prior to your shift.
NO PETS ARE ALLOWED, so please do NOT bring them. Thanks!