The Inspiration for our Blueberry Pattern Ceramics
How childhood summers of picking blueberries translate into pottery with a wholesome, happy feeling.
Those plump little berries that pop in your mouth seem to indicate 'wholesome and healthy'.
The blueberry branch with it’s simple lobed leaf alternating on the meandering
branch seem to resonate with 'farmhouse fresh' and 'plain and simple' and 'authentic'.
The Blueberry pattern is a natural complement to pottery cereal bowls and stoneware
pitchers. The steady repeating stroke dancing and dabbing around the pot trims
the shoulders of the vessel like decorative epaulettes ready to serve in a
serviceable creamer, a dutiful plate, a welcoming bowl.
Historically, blueberries have been a frequent symbol of the simple life,
when one could grab a handful of fresh berries and decorate a bowl of breakfast
cereal with them. My first memories of handfuls of blueberries started with
hopping into the canoe and paddling out across the glasslike pond, bow of
the boat slicing the surface and sending ripples backward in anticipation of
berries. Dip of the paddle, stroke and wait, dip, stroke and wait.
The morning still chilly before breakfast, till reaching the otherside of the lake,
we’d shimmy the canoe up close to the overhanging branches of wild blueberry
bushes. The canoe would wobble and we’d grab the branches for stability,
one hand picking berries, one hand holding on, berry bowl balanced on knees.
When the bowl was full or the tummy grumbled too loudly for breakfast,
we’d paddle fast and noisily back to our dock, clatter of paddles hardly
stowed and race into the house to add berries to the pancake batter or muffins
being mixed.
Blueberries always feel fresh to me; these days, we know that they have all
kinds of good stuff, anti-oxidants and Vitamin C in them, all the healthy stuff.
They are the one of the few really blue berries. The little crown on each berry
tells you it is a blueberry and not a dogberry or a huckleberry. I have read that
you can tell the difference by counting the number of seeds inside, since they
all come from the same botanical family, vaccinium. The huckleberry has ten seeds,
but the seeds are so infinitely small, it seemed easier, as kids, to distinguish
the difference after it was popped in the mouth and chewed. If the seeds were a
little crunchy, then it was a huckleberry.
When decorating blueberry branches on pottery, first a pitcher, then a wide bowl,
then a tall lamp, then a diminutive salt or pepper shaker, I can’t help but think
of one botanical reference books explanation of the varieties of blueberries.
It went something like this. Note: there are high bush blueberries and low bush
blueberries. There are also low highbush blueberries and high lowbush blueberries.
As well, there are high highbush berries and low lowbush berries. Hmmm.
It went on to describe the varieties of low high and high low until
it seemed that there were 17 different possibilities. I have since confined my taste
testing of wild blueberries to the ones I can reach.
One summer came to be remembered as the famous Summer of the Seven Wild Blueberry Pies.
Now, if you have ever picked wild blueberries you will know, from painful and
backbreaking, calf crunching, tickbite itching, chigger scratching experience
that it can sometimes take a toll. First locating a patch that no one else has
claimed by getter there first is a must. And wild berry bushes, at least in New
England, tend to be spread out across the forest floor, requiring lots of stoop
and walk. Or in small overgrown meadow patches requiring battling brambles and briers.
Or in burnt over forest spots way, way down abandoned logging roads. The year
of the seven wild blueberry pies, we traveled to new and previously unknown locations
in search of enough of the tiny tart berries for a pie. It only takes about 3 cups
to make the pie filling, but that is after picking enough to fill your stomach before picking,
during picking and on the long ride home. Nevertheless, that summer we accomplished
the goal during the blueberry pickin’ season and treated ourselves and friends
and neighbors to real homemade wild blueberry pie, complete with
my-Nana-showed-me-how-to piecrust from scratch, seven times.
Priscilla Palmer
Emerson Creek Pottery
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Blueberry Soap Dish
4" wide
$9.50
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