A Multi-Day Commitment
A typical anagama or wood-burning catenary arch kiln firing takes anywhere from 24 to 72 hours or more, requires constant attention, and uses hundreds of kilograms of wood. The experience is as much about the physical ritual of stoking the fire through the night as it is about the finished pots.
Key Stages
Loading: Pots are placed in the kiln with careful consideration of ash fall direction, proximity to the firebox, and the natural draft path through the kiln. Wads (small balls of refractory clay) are used under each piece instead of kiln wash, to allow ash glaze to develop all the way to the foot ring without fusing the piece to the shelf.
Stoking: Wood is added through the firebox at regular intervals (sometimes every few minutes during peak temperature phases). The stoker's job is to maintain a steady climbing temperature while managing the kiln atmosphere.
Reduction: Wood firing is naturally a reduction atmosphere because burning wood consumes oxygen. The level of reduction can be controlled by the frequency and amount of stoking.
Cooling: After peak temperature is reached and the firebox is closed, the kiln cools slowly (sometimes for several days). Opening too early causes thermal shock.
What to Expect
Wood-fired pots are never uniform. Two pots placed side by side in the same firing will look completely different based on their orientation, the packing of ash, and the vagaries of flame. This variability is what makes wood-fired work so prized: every piece is a record of its own unique firing.
Explore More
The multi-day stoking process described here is characteristic of the anagama kiln, where the entire firing chamber is a single tunnel built on a slope. Bernard Leach built the first Japanese-style climbing kiln in the West at his pottery in St Ives, Cornwall, helping to establish wood firing as a central practice in Western studio ceramics.
Crew Rhythm and Quality Control
Long wood firings succeed through team consistency:
- Keep stoking intervals steady and logged.
- Rotate roles to reduce fatigue-based mistakes.
- Record firebox behavior, cone movement, and visual flame response each shift.
Pro Tip
After unloading, review results as a group against the kiln map. This is the fastest way to improve placement and stoking decisions for the next firing.