How to Actually Center
Centering has two distinct hand movements working together. Master both, then combine them.
The Push: From the Side
This is the primary centering force. With the wheel spinning fast:
- Place your dominant hand against the side of the clay, fingers pointing down. The heel and side of your hand press into the clay.
- Brace that elbow firmly against your thigh or the splash pan rim.
- Push the clay firmly inward, toward the center of the wheel.
- Your hand is not moving up and down. It is pushing horizontally inward.
The clay will resist. Hold the pressure steady and the wheel's rotation will work the clay toward center. Think "steady pressure," not "jabbing."
The Pull: From the Top
The top hand prevents the clay from rising up as you push from the side:
- Place your non-dominant hand flat on top of the clay.
- Press down with gentle but firm pressure.
- This hand works against the side push, keeping the clay low and compact.
Working Together
Both hands must work at the same time:
- Side hand pushes in.
- Top hand pushes down.
- The clay is compressed from two directions simultaneously.
Release slowly and check: does the clay still wobble? If yes, repeat. If the wobble is only slight, you might be close enough to proceed.
Pro Tip
Use water on your hands but not too much. Wet clay is slippery: your hands will slide off instead of gripping. A thin slick is all you need.
Push-Pull Timing Practice
Practice three short cycles:
- 10 seconds steady inward push
- 10 seconds top-down stabilization
- 10 seconds combined pressure
This builds coordination before your first opening move.
Keep Exploring
Centering relies on centripetal force, the inward-directed force that keeps a body moving along a curved path rather than flying outward. The goal of centering is to achieve perfect symmetry in the clay mass so that it appears motionless while spinning, much like a balanced wheel on a car.