On a Wednesday evening in South Philadelphia, the front classroom at Black Hound Clay Studio South hums with the steady rhythm of spinning clay. Black Hound Clay Studio South, at 1701 Federal Street, offers an eight-week Independent Projects — Wheel class led by instructor Lisa Belsky. Scheduled Wednesdays, September 23 to November 11, 6–9 pm, this course is designed for intermediate and advanced potters who want focused studio time with expert guidance.
The room centers on potter’s wheels, a loading kiln, benches stacked with tools, and a curated selection of glazes. Key features include large-scale throwing space, a kiln room for bisque and glaze firing, and an open studio session included with tuition that lets you test glazes and refine finishes. Students work on individual goals — from pushing scale to advanced surface decoration — while troubleshooting common throwing issues under Lisa’s eye. The class limits enrollment to ten, keeping feedback immediate and hands-on; the front classroom meeting point makes check-in straightforward, and the studio is wheelchair accessible.
What sets this offering apart in Philadelphia’s craft scene is its balance of autonomy and instruction. Unlike structured beginner workshops, this series treats the wheel as a workspace where experienced makers iterate, experiment, and complete projects across multiple firings. That independence, paired with included firing, tools, glazes and 25 pounds of clay, compresses the usual months-long learning curve into concentrated weekly practice. One free open studio included with the class further extends access beyond scheduled hours.
Practical details matter: students must be comfortable throwing, trimming, and glazing before registering; bring project goals and any reference pieces you want to replicate. The class accommodates makers sixteen and up, and uses an installment payment plan for early registrants. Black Hound’s South studio sits within a neighborhood known for converting industrial spaces into creative workplaces, so you can pair studio nights with nearby parks or evening walks along Federal Street.
Tuition covers all instruction, tools, glazes, firing, and 25 pounds of clay; additional clay may be purchased through the studio’s website. The studio’s front classroom is the official meeting point at 1701 Federal Street, with easy street access and public transit nearby. Class size caps at ten to preserve individualized feedback, and the studio’s wheelchair accessibility ensures makers of varied mobility can participate. Come prepared with sketches, patience.
For makers who treat clay as active exploration, this Independent Projects night is a purposeful retreat — a place to refine form, push surface techniques, and finish work under professional guidance. It’s an ideal fit for potters ready to move beyond demonstrations into sustained, project-based practice while plugged into Philadelphia’s growing arts community. For questions, contact [email protected] and arrive ready to center your hands on the wheel.