Clay in Sheet Form
A slab is simply a flat sheet of clay. When the clay is still fresh and flexible right after rolling, it is called a soft slab. This flexibility is exactly what makes it special.
How to Roll a Slab
The most common method uses a rolling pin and two guide sticks.
- Place two wooden guide sticks (about 6mm thick) on either side of your clay lump.
- Roll the rolling pin over the clay, resting on the guide sticks.
- The guide sticks stop the rolling pin from pressing the clay thinner than their height, giving you a perfectly even slab.
- Rotate the clay 90 degrees and roll again to prevent sticking and ensure even thickness.
Canvas Cloth
Always roll on a piece of canvas. It:
- Prevents the clay from sticking to the table.
- Adds a subtle texture to the clay surface.
- Makes it easy to pick up the slab without distorting it.
What Can You Make?
Soft slabs are ideal for organic, curved forms because the clay can still bend without cracking:
- Draped bowls (draped over a mold or inside a bowl)
- Sculptural curved vessels
- Tulip cups and organic wall pieces
- Wrapped cylinder forms
The key is to work while the clay is still flexible, usually within the first 20–30 minutes after rolling.
Soft Slab Timing Map
Use this timing guideline:
- 0-10 minutes: most flexible, best for draping.
- 10-25 minutes: best control for wrapping and trimming.
- 25+ minutes: check for stiffness and recondition workflow.
Room humidity changes this window, so test the clay, not just the clock.
Keep Exploring
The Venus of Dolni Vestonice, shaped from clay over 25,000 years ago, is the oldest known ceramic object and was formed entirely by hand. Draping soft slabs over molds is a technique borrowed from slip casting traditions, where gravity and absorbent molds do much of the shaping work.