• Subscribe to Blog via Email

    Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 4,626 other subscribers
  • Banner with colorful artwork promoting an art shop featuring kindness coloring pages, artist activities, and resources for teachers.

Clay Pocket Pots

 Today I held an after school clay class for grades K-5.  I had 11 kids sign up and we made pocket pots.  These are so fun!  After painting them, we will attach a wire to the top and they can hang on the wall to hold items like keys or money.  I took pictures of the kids as they worked.

Hands working with grey clay on a flat surface, using a gold oval as a stencil to trace. Forks are on the side, ready to be used for crafting small pots.
Roll out a slab of clay.  Trace an oval template and cut out.
Two pieces of gray clay shaped into semicircles placed on a fabric surface.
Cut a straight line across the oval, about 2/3 of the way from the bottom.

A gray half-sphere clay sculpture with a horizontal groove, resembling a pocket, set against a white background.
Take the piece you cut off, and attach it to the bottom of the slab, bumping it up a little.  Score the parts with a fork and add some water to moisten. 

Use the back of a spoon to smooth the seams and make it stronger.  Also smooth out any bumps or jagged edges.

Clay sculpture of a round pocket pot, topped with a bow. Perfect for small flower pots or as a decorative pocket-sized piece.
Use leftover clay to cut out shapes for designs.

A clay pocket pot with various geometric cutouts, including stars, squares, and triangles, sits beside a white sculpting tool.
You can use objects to stamp designs in the clay.  These were pieces from the game Perfection, which had broke.

Clay art depicts a dragon with wings extended, emerging from foliage.
You can carve in designs or draw on the clay with toothpicks.  Add holes to the top with a pointed tool.  Be sure they are large enough for wire or yarn to go through.

A clay sculpture with an open mouth and two protruding shapes resembling ears or antlers.
The holes are the eyes.  Next step is to fire, then glaze, then fire again, then add the wire or yarn to through the top holes.  All of these examples were made by K-5 grades.  I have done this project with older grades and not had a tracer.  The kids could make the pocket pot in different shapes.

Discover more from Art is Basic | An Elementary Art Blog

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Bookmark the permalink.

About Marcia Beckett

Marcia is an elementary art teacher and loves painting, drawing, sculpture, art journaling and clay. Her blog, Art is Basic, features many exciting art projects for kids.

I'd love to hear your thoughts!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

  • Banner with colorful artwork promoting an art shop featuring kindness coloring pages, artist activities, and resources for teachers.