Building the Seat Into the Pot
A gallery is a ledge thrown into the inside of a pot's rim. It is the seat the lid rests on. When you throw a gallery into a pot, you are building a precision fit directly into the vessel, and that demands a steady hand and the right technique.
What a Gallery Looks Like
Imagine looking down into the top of a teapot or canister. Inside the rim, there is a small horizontal step, about 1cm wide. The lid rests on this step. From outside, the pot looks normal. From inside, there is this neat ledge.
Throwing the Gallery
The gallery is formed while the pot is still on the wheel, immediately after throwing the walls.
- Slow the wheel to medium-low.
- Place two fingers (index and middle) inside the rim, positioned at the depth where you want the gallery to sit, typically 1–1.5cm below the top of the rim.
- Press outward with those two fingers while your outside hand supports the wall. This pushes clay outward to form the horizontal shelf of the gallery.
- Define the inner wall: The inside edge of the gallery should be vertical and clean. Use a finger to compress and define this inner step.
- Measure the gallery opening: Use your caliper to measure the inner diameter of the gallery. This is the measurement to throw the lid to.
The Gallery Rim
The outer rim above the gallery can be left straight, or slightly flared outward; this gives visual elegance and provides a guide for placing the lid.
Pro Tip
Throw the gallery slightly deeper and wider than you think necessary. Clay is much easier to remove later than to add back.
Gallery Quality Check
After throwing the gallery:
- Inner gallery wall is clean and vertical
- Shelf is wide enough for stable seating
- Caliper measurement captured immediately
These checks save hours of lid adjustment later.
The Bigger Picture
The gallery is a precision feature that demands the same careful measurement with a caliper as any other lid-fitting detail. In the Japanese tea ceremony, lidded vessels like the mizusashi (water jar) rely on gallery fits that are snug yet easy to open with one hand. The gallery technique is also central to teapot making in the studio pottery tradition, where a well-fitted lid elevates a functional pot into something truly refined.