Black Hound Clay Studio South is located at 1701 Federal Street in South Philadelphia. This waitlist covers the Independent Projects Wheel sessions on Wednesday evenings led by instructor Lisa Belsky. Across eight weekly three-hour sessions makers gather to practice throwing, trimming, and glazing while pursuing individual project goals and feedback.
Rather than follow a rigid curriculum, this format centers on independent projects with instructor feedback. Students propose targets—consistency in forms, altered vessels, or glaze experiments—and receive practical troubleshooting on centering, throwing rhythm, trimming technique, and firing expectations. The studio limits class size to ten makers, maintaining high instructor attention levels.
The workspace is practical and tool-focused: rows of electric wheels, drying shelves, a communal glazing table, buckets for slip and water, and scheduled kiln firings. Minimum age is sixteen. Group capacity is ten. To join the waitlist email [email protected]. Being on the list does not obligate enrollment if contacted directly.
Set in South Philadelphia, the studio sits amid former industrial blocks that now hold maker spaces, cafés, and small galleries. Evening walks reveal painted brick facades, market stalls a few blocks away, and public murals that change the mood of a night out. The neighborhood atmosphere extends the creative energy beyond the bench.
This session suits makers who already understand basic wheel work and want concentrated, project-oriented studio time. Travelers with an interest in craft can fit weekly practice into a city visit; local residents gain dependable firing schedules and mentorship. Expect to leave with written notes and wet pieces ready for firing.
Come prepared with a willingness to get messy and to rehearse basic motions. The studio typically supplies clay, tools, and communal glazes, but bring a notebook, a towel, and clothes you don’t mind smudging. If you have personal tools or a favorite rib bring them; label anything left on shelves.
Skill gains from the course tend to be technical and repeatable: steadier centering, faster pulling, cleaner foot formation, truer walls, and better trimming. Participants also learn to document variables—wetness, speed, thickness—and to adjust motions accordingly. That process-oriented learning helps translate sporadic studio nights into measurable progress over months and seasons.
Joining the waitlist is straightforward: add your name and contact details and wait for outreach if a spot opens. Because spots are limited the list moves when cancellations occur, so flexibility matters. If you have scheduling constraints, note them when signing up. For direct questions contact [email protected] for faster response.
For visiting makers or neighborhood regulars seeking steady progress, Wednesday evenings provide disciplined studio time and focused instruction within a small, committed community. The results are tangible: objects you shaped and a clearer habitual practice for future work. Add your name to the waitlist to be notified if one opens.