Why You Can't Skip Wedging
You've got your clay, you're excited to throw, and the wheel is right there. But before you slam that clay down, there is one absolutely non-negotiable step: wedging.
What Is Wedging?
Wedging is the process of kneading and working clay with your hands before use. Think of it like kneading bread dough: you are preparing the material so it behaves the way you need it to.
The Explosion Risk
Clay fresh from the bag or reclaimed from scraps contains air pockets: small bubbles trapped inside the mass. These bubbles are harmless to look at, but they are destructive in the kiln.
When clay is fired, trapped pockets become pressure points. Expanding gases and steam from residual moisture can force their way out violently, shattering your pot. And it doesn't just ruin your piece - fragments can damage nearby work and chip kiln shelves.
Beyond Safety
Wedging isn't only about removing air. It also homogenizes the clay: mixing it until the consistency is perfectly even throughout.
- Air bubbles create weak spots that tear walls as you pull them on the wheel.
- Hitting an air pocket while centering can throw your clay completely off-balance.
- Uneven clay is unpredictable and frustrating to work with.
The Goal
A well-wedged ball of clay should feel smooth and consistent from the center to the surface: no lumps, no bubbles, no soft or hard spots. That is the foundation of everything else.
5-Minute Wedging Routine
Use this before every throwing session:
- Cut your clay in half and inspect for streaks or pockets.
- Wedge for 20-30 strokes.
- Cut and inspect again.
- Repeat until the interior looks uniform.
- Finish by forming a compact ball with no visible seams.
This quick routine saves far more time than it costs.
The Bigger Picture
The comparison to bread is no accident. Wedging clay and kneading dough share the same physics of folding and compressing to remove gas pockets. The explosion risk in kilns is related to thermal shock, the same force that cracks a cold glass under boiling water. Some of the earliest evidence of clay preparation comes from Jomon pottery in Japan, where potters were working clay by hand over 16,000 years ago.