The Inspiration for our Pinecones Pattern Ceramics
East coast pines shed their grace on this special pottery line.
The stately Pine appears again as a Pottery pattern. This time it is the cones that are
featured with wisps of pine boughs around. The brush easily describes the clustered
pinecone in upturned brown strokes as well as the pine green boughs in swift arcs.
Always there is the whooshing sound of the White Pine boughs as they rustle in the wind
which, if heard in the artist’s mind, facilitates the realism in the brush. Often there is
the deep blue green coolness beneath each tree, which, if imagined as one strokes, replicates
the color. We find that the pine lends itself beautifully to our pottery, and gives
a natural and rustic charm to our dinnerware, bakeware, kitchen ware and home decor.
The evergreen quality of pine trees enhances the symbology of the pine as 'everlasting'
or 'immortal'. I think of the Pine Trees as being consistent and steadfast. Certainly
their symbology in Japanese scroll painting is noted, and the 'lonesome' pine in Early
American tapestry and decoration is remembered.
Old Mr. Dame, a local farmer in my childhood, told me about the number of needles in the
needle-socket. He said that if it is a White pine it will have an odd number of needles
and if it is a Red or Black pine, it will have an even number. This is certainly true of
the Pines that I grew up with in Elementary school. Back in the days before paved school
yards and metal play equipment, our recess time was spent building huts under the great
White Pines. We would use a pine bough as a broom and sweep pathways in the pine needles
strewn forest floor, making 'rooms' just large enough for one or two people to crouch in.
After establishing the home, we would meet in adjoining rooms, my hut and your hut sharing
a room, and make pine needle necklaces.
How to make a pine needle necklace
Remove all but one of the needles from the needle-socket
being careful not to damage the sticky socket. Flex the remaining long needle over and insert
the tip into the socket, it will hold. Do the same with the next pine needle cluster, this
time interlacing the tip into the previous loop before closing. When you have a long enough
chain attach the ends and place over your head, or that of your friend.
Pine tree sap is sticky and defeat removal from clothes or hands. Many a time I would come
home from climbing pine trees with the telltale evidence all over me. I enjoyed tremendously
the stepped laddering of the pine branches, making it easy to climb. We learned in 4th grade
Science class that you can tell how old a pine tree is by counting each of the tiers of
branches. Many a time we would race to count out the age of a towering pine.
Along the Emerson Creek in Uxbridge Massachusetts, original home of the Pottery, there are
3 massive Hemlock trees. This stately evergreen with delicate flat needles grows slowly and
steadily along the quiet shaded glens of New England. The lowest branches of these trees was
well over my head. But, with a scramble and the help of lower branches on a nearby
river birch, I was able to hoist myself up and begin the ascent to the top.
Now this tree, the one by the largest boulder just below the old millrace was huge. It took
two people to reach their arms around it at chest height.
So as I climbed up, branch tier by tier, the trunk of the tree became manageably smaller
until I could reach my arms around it. Higher I went, now emerging above the tops of the
oaks in the forest, but still there was more Hemlock tree above me. I could see the old post
and beam barn, and the 15 room farmhouse, original home of Ralph Waldo Emerson’s uncle,
(thus the name Emerson Creek).
A crow flew by, mightily close it seemed, certainly I could hear its’ wings flap.
Still higher I climbed until the trunk began to sway from my weight, but determined,
I shimmied up till I was able to wave my hand over the very tip. I suspect this
hemlock was well over 300 years old and hopefully still resting by the side of Emerson
Creek.
The Pinecones Pattern is one of many pine patterns that we’ve made on our pottery. But
always it is with these memories that the decoration begins. The pinecones decorate the
pottery in much the same way that they decorate the pine trees and continue the cycle of
memories.
Priscilla Palmer
Emerson Creek Pottery
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