All language subtitles for The.Great.Pottery.Throw.Down.S04E06.WEBRip.x264-ION10

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish Download
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,834 --> 00:00:06,134 It's week six, 2 00:00:06,200 --> 00:00:08,900 and the potters are back at the wheel for Terracotta Week. 3 00:00:08,967 --> 00:00:11,297 In the late 18th century, 4 00:00:11,367 --> 00:00:13,697 throwing at the wheel was backbreaking stuff, 5 00:00:13,767 --> 00:00:16,067 as rope-driven wheels like this one 6 00:00:16,133 --> 00:00:19,273 would require an entire team working together in perfect unison. 7 00:00:19,333 --> 00:00:21,973 Thankfully, our potters have electric wheels. 8 00:00:22,033 --> 00:00:23,603 And I have Rose. 9 00:00:23,667 --> 00:00:26,067 Welcome to The Great Pottery Throw Down. 10 00:00:26,133 --> 00:00:28,303 Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Okay, Rose. Okay. 11 00:00:28,367 --> 00:00:29,797 [McSweeney] Last week... 12 00:00:29,867 --> 00:00:31,427 -Go. -[contestants shout] 13 00:00:31,500 --> 00:00:33,600 ...the potters sculpted music legends. 14 00:00:33,667 --> 00:00:36,827 I can really start to channel my Prince of Darkness. 15 00:00:36,900 --> 00:00:39,430 And even though Henry had a faceless Ozzy Osbourne... 16 00:00:39,500 --> 00:00:41,670 Oh, he doesn't look good, does he? 17 00:00:41,734 --> 00:00:43,804 ...it was Lee's cheekless Dolly Parton 18 00:00:43,867 --> 00:00:45,697 that meant he said farewell to the pottery 19 00:00:45,767 --> 00:00:48,367 and went back to his "9 to 5." 20 00:00:48,433 --> 00:00:51,073 But for Alon, he claimed his first Potter of the Week... 21 00:00:51,133 --> 00:00:54,573 -It's fantastic. -...with a perfect Bruce Springsteen. 22 00:00:54,633 --> 00:00:57,033 -This week... -It's about to get messy. 23 00:00:57,100 --> 00:00:58,400 ...it's a terracotta trio... 24 00:00:58,467 --> 00:01:01,227 If it breaks now? Disaster. 25 00:01:01,300 --> 00:01:02,800 ...with the potters throwing cookware... 26 00:01:02,867 --> 00:01:04,227 I'm out of breath already. 27 00:01:04,300 --> 00:01:06,800 -Uh-oh. -Ugh! 28 00:01:06,867 --> 00:01:09,327 ...as the competition to stay in the pottery... 29 00:01:09,400 --> 00:01:10,870 -Be careful, be careful. -...heats up. 30 00:01:10,934 --> 00:01:12,674 Am I allowed to take my clothes off? 31 00:01:44,066 --> 00:01:46,066 [McSweeney] The potters are back. 32 00:01:46,133 --> 00:01:47,833 And now just eight remain, 33 00:01:47,900 --> 00:01:51,170 and they're all fired up for a terracotta tussle 34 00:01:51,233 --> 00:01:53,033 to keep their place in the pottery. 35 00:01:53,100 --> 00:01:55,530 I'm really, really relieved to be here, 36 00:01:55,600 --> 00:01:58,370 and I'm super lucky to be here, 37 00:01:58,433 --> 00:02:00,733 because, yeah, last week was such a disaster. 38 00:02:00,800 --> 00:02:04,400 The competition is starting to get really difficult now. 39 00:02:04,467 --> 00:02:06,797 It's the wheat from the chaff, as they say. 40 00:02:06,867 --> 00:02:09,767 It's going to be carnage, I think. [laughs] 41 00:02:09,834 --> 00:02:13,474 I'm really happy. I'm sort of back to week one energy. 42 00:02:13,533 --> 00:02:15,873 This is good. It's going to be great. [laughs] 43 00:02:15,934 --> 00:02:17,574 Terracotta. Let's do this. 44 00:02:19,734 --> 00:02:22,104 Good morning, potters. 45 00:02:22,166 --> 00:02:24,766 For your main make challenge this week, 46 00:02:24,834 --> 00:02:27,404 Rich and Keith would like you to throw 47 00:02:27,467 --> 00:02:31,827 a signature set of terracotta cookware: 48 00:02:31,900 --> 00:02:36,370 a family-sized chicken brick, a casserole dish, and a tagine. 49 00:02:36,433 --> 00:02:40,133 They're very functional, but they also have to look good, 50 00:02:40,200 --> 00:02:42,330 so think about those well-fitting lids 51 00:02:42,400 --> 00:02:44,270 and think about those robust knobs. 52 00:02:44,333 --> 00:02:47,333 And what we're going to do this week 53 00:02:47,400 --> 00:02:52,230 is we're going to allow you to use the drying room right from the very start. 54 00:02:52,300 --> 00:02:55,670 Terracotta is a beautiful, iron-rich clay body 55 00:02:55,734 --> 00:02:58,174 that remains porous when it's been fired. 56 00:02:58,233 --> 00:03:01,973 Time management and what to dry when, and for how long, 57 00:03:02,033 --> 00:03:03,973 is crucial to this challenge. 58 00:03:04,033 --> 00:03:07,173 Terracotta is a very unforgiving clay. 59 00:03:07,233 --> 00:03:12,103 Okay, potters, you have been given two and a half hours, 60 00:03:12,166 --> 00:03:16,326 and your time starts now. 61 00:03:16,400 --> 00:03:18,300 [McSweeney] In the first part of this challenge, 62 00:03:18,367 --> 00:03:20,197 the potters need to throw and shape 63 00:03:20,266 --> 00:03:23,266 their three pieces of supersized cookware. 64 00:03:23,333 --> 00:03:25,333 Big throws are always quite exciting. 65 00:03:25,400 --> 00:03:27,370 Each potter has been given 66 00:03:27,433 --> 00:03:30,273 a hefty 20 kilos of terracotta to wrestle with. 67 00:03:30,333 --> 00:03:33,473 I'm out of breath already. Oh, I'm going to have to take my top off. 68 00:03:33,533 --> 00:03:35,403 The Great Pottery Nude Throw Down. 69 00:03:35,467 --> 00:03:37,697 Am I allowed to take my clothes off? 70 00:03:37,767 --> 00:03:41,867 So, Keith, we've had a truckload of terracotta delivered, 71 00:03:41,934 --> 00:03:45,974 and we've asked our potters to make three family-sized 72 00:03:46,033 --> 00:03:49,803 A chicken brick, a casserole and a tagine. 73 00:03:49,867 --> 00:03:52,397 They're big pots to make. Looking at this chicken brick, 74 00:03:52,467 --> 00:03:54,167 they've got to throw this big enough 75 00:03:54,233 --> 00:03:56,073 that it has a volume to contain a chicken, 76 00:03:56,133 --> 00:03:57,633 and they've then got to time it right 77 00:03:57,700 --> 00:03:59,430 to put that cut down the side, 78 00:03:59,500 --> 00:04:00,700 so that the piece doesn't collapse. 79 00:04:00,767 --> 00:04:03,297 Let's not forget, when they cut it, 80 00:04:03,367 --> 00:04:05,167 that facet has to fit exactly. 81 00:04:05,233 --> 00:04:08,003 The tagine is such an iconic shape, 82 00:04:08,066 --> 00:04:10,396 and it presents its own challenges in the make. 83 00:04:10,467 --> 00:04:13,527 I mean, the lid particularly is difficult. 84 00:04:13,600 --> 00:04:16,530 The lid really wants to work with the base of the pot as well. 85 00:04:16,600 --> 00:04:19,370 You know, they need to work really well together. 86 00:04:19,433 --> 00:04:21,803 That's really lovely. It's really nice to hold. 87 00:04:21,867 --> 00:04:26,167 The casserole is often seen as a very humble cooking pot, but far from it. 88 00:04:26,233 --> 00:04:30,503 I mean, there's so much skill that goes into making one successfully, isn't there? 89 00:04:30,567 --> 00:04:32,927 [Jones] This has to hold four litres of liquid, 90 00:04:33,000 --> 00:04:34,970 and predominantly, most of the time, 91 00:04:35,033 --> 00:04:37,133 these pieces are going to be hot, 92 00:04:37,200 --> 00:04:39,370 and you've got to be able to pick them up safely 93 00:04:39,433 --> 00:04:42,273 and not spill your contents all over the kitchen floor. 94 00:04:42,333 --> 00:04:44,203 And that's what they've really got to think about. 95 00:04:44,266 --> 00:04:48,026 They are all objects that are designed around their purpose, 96 00:04:48,100 --> 00:04:50,570 It's a tough challenge. 97 00:04:50,633 --> 00:04:54,003 -[McSweeney] First on the terracotta to-do list... -Uh-oh. 98 00:04:54,066 --> 00:04:55,996 ...is the retro classic, the chicken brick. 99 00:04:56,066 --> 00:04:59,096 [Sal] Never thrown one of these. Think you've got to look 100 00:04:59,166 --> 00:05:01,526 some pretty old cookbooks before you see these things. 101 00:05:01,600 --> 00:05:04,170 [Jodie] Apparently you literally cook a whole chicken in. 102 00:05:04,233 --> 00:05:05,603 I don't eat chicken, so I don't know 103 00:05:05,667 --> 00:05:07,197 how chicken's supposed to be cooked. 104 00:05:07,266 --> 00:05:09,566 -Morning, Sal. -[Sal] Good morning. Hello. 105 00:05:09,633 --> 00:05:11,503 [Miller] So, tell us about your design. 106 00:05:11,567 --> 00:05:14,127 [Sal] My design is based on Inuit art. 107 00:05:14,200 --> 00:05:17,130 The Inuits put these animals on their artwork 108 00:05:17,200 --> 00:05:19,130 in the hopes that the spirit of the animal 109 00:05:19,200 --> 00:05:21,400 will be transferred to the person. 110 00:05:21,467 --> 00:05:24,327 [McSweeney] Sal has chosen bears to decorate her tagine, 111 00:05:24,400 --> 00:05:26,500 an eagle on her casserole dish, 112 00:05:26,567 --> 00:05:28,897 and for her chicken brick, she's going for a whale. 113 00:05:28,967 --> 00:05:32,467 -This will be the orca. -[Jones] That's a good shape for a chicken brick. 114 00:05:32,533 --> 00:05:35,533 Who knew an orca would make a good shape for a chicken brick? 115 00:05:35,600 --> 00:05:38,370 [McSweeney] Sal is not the only potter being inventive 116 00:05:38,433 --> 00:05:40,073 with the shape of their chicken brick. 117 00:05:40,133 --> 00:05:42,373 So, I'm going to do this Western theme. 118 00:05:42,433 --> 00:05:44,673 I'm going to make the chicken brick look like a saddle. 119 00:05:44,734 --> 00:05:46,574 [McSweeney] Peter and his wife, Jill, 120 00:05:46,633 --> 00:05:48,533 are country and western fanatics. 121 00:05:48,600 --> 00:05:50,530 His saddle-shaped brick will be joined 122 00:05:50,600 --> 00:05:52,800 by a horseshoe-embellished casserole dish 123 00:05:52,867 --> 00:05:55,527 and a tagine design inspired by his favourite cowgirl. 124 00:05:55,600 --> 00:05:57,300 You say these are your wife's boots. 125 00:05:57,367 --> 00:06:00,127 -What does she do in those? -[laughs] 126 00:06:00,200 --> 00:06:02,830 -[Miller] I don't mean it like that. Come on. -[Jones] Walk? No, walk. 127 00:06:02,900 --> 00:06:05,570 -No, she-- -Or maybe I don't want to know. I don't know. 128 00:06:05,633 --> 00:06:07,503 I mean, are you riders? Do you... 129 00:06:07,567 --> 00:06:09,127 No, no. It's just country music. 130 00:06:09,200 --> 00:06:12,430 I'm going to put filigree all over. 131 00:06:12,500 --> 00:06:15,770 -Brilliant. -Uh, and then on these, horseshoe handles 132 00:06:15,834 --> 00:06:17,804 and filigree blazoned all over it. 133 00:06:17,867 --> 00:06:20,667 -[Miller] Wow. -[McSweeney] Wow. How did you meet your wife? 134 00:06:20,734 --> 00:06:23,074 Um... [laughs] She came to value my house. 135 00:06:23,133 --> 00:06:26,933 -Was she wearing leather boots at the time? -[laughter] 136 00:06:27,000 --> 00:06:29,530 This is definitely the biggest thing I've ever thrown. 137 00:06:29,600 --> 00:06:31,270 [McSweeney] Throwing a vessel large enough 138 00:06:31,333 --> 00:06:33,703 to hold a whole chicken is no mean feat. 139 00:06:33,767 --> 00:06:36,897 Oh, it's a bit hard for me, Sal. I haven't got the muscles. 140 00:06:36,967 --> 00:06:38,567 [groans] 141 00:06:38,633 --> 00:06:41,403 The potters must first form the main body of the brick, 142 00:06:41,467 --> 00:06:43,397 which will be then cut in half later on 143 00:06:43,467 --> 00:06:46,727 during the refine stage to form the lid and base. 144 00:06:46,800 --> 00:06:51,400 It is a beautiful clay, but it's a little bit unstable. 145 00:06:51,467 --> 00:06:53,467 Ah. 146 00:06:53,533 --> 00:06:56,073 [McSweeney] While some are attempting to throw it whole... 147 00:06:56,133 --> 00:06:59,203 -I'm gonna try to throw it in one. -It's really hard. 148 00:06:59,266 --> 00:07:01,626 You've got to be really steady-handed. 149 00:07:01,700 --> 00:07:04,700 ...most of the potters are throwing their bricks in two sections. 150 00:07:04,767 --> 00:07:07,027 [Jodie] This is going to be the top of my chicken brick. 151 00:07:07,100 --> 00:07:09,030 I'm going to do it in two parts and join them together. 152 00:07:09,100 --> 00:07:14,100 I don't think I am capable of throwing something that tall. 153 00:07:14,166 --> 00:07:15,726 So, yeah, this was my only option, really. 154 00:07:15,800 --> 00:07:17,900 [McSweeney] Hannah will have the tricky job 155 00:07:17,967 --> 00:07:20,697 of joining her chicken brick before she decorates it, 156 00:07:20,767 --> 00:07:22,727 along with her casserole dish and tagine, 157 00:07:22,800 --> 00:07:25,700 with a stamped star design inspired by Portuguese tiles. 158 00:07:25,767 --> 00:07:29,367 I don't know if today's going to be a good throwing day or not. 159 00:07:29,433 --> 00:07:31,933 I don't feel super confident. 160 00:07:32,000 --> 00:07:33,670 [Shenyue] I believe in you. 161 00:07:33,734 --> 00:07:35,674 [Hannah] Thanks, Shenyue. [exhales] 162 00:07:35,734 --> 00:07:37,334 Get it done, get it done. 163 00:07:37,400 --> 00:07:40,030 -Bore da, Jodie. -Bore da. 164 00:07:40,100 --> 00:07:41,970 -[Miller] Hi, Jodie. -Now, before I forget... 165 00:07:42,033 --> 00:07:44,973 -[speaks foreign language] -I haven't got a clue. 166 00:07:45,033 --> 00:07:47,303 -[laughter] -Oh, well, there you go then. 167 00:07:47,367 --> 00:07:50,297 Apparently that means, um, "Tell me about your set." 168 00:07:50,367 --> 00:07:51,567 -All right. Yeah. -[Jones] Yeah. 169 00:07:51,633 --> 00:07:54,973 Yeah. I've got my old A-level art folio, 170 00:07:55,033 --> 00:07:56,803 which I'm taking inspiration from. 171 00:07:56,867 --> 00:07:58,397 -Wow. -[McSweeney] Oh, wow. 172 00:07:58,467 --> 00:08:02,097 My inspiration are these little papier-mâché, 173 00:08:02,800 --> 00:08:04,530 um, designs that I made. 174 00:08:04,600 --> 00:08:07,130 So I'm taking elements from that, the abstract elements, 175 00:08:07,200 --> 00:08:08,670 and putting that as my decoration. 176 00:08:08,734 --> 00:08:12,404 It's a little nod to my school days, you know? 177 00:08:12,467 --> 00:08:16,897 [McSweeney] Back at school, 17-year-old Jodie got an A for her art project. 178 00:08:16,967 --> 00:08:19,727 She's hoping that 18 years on, her geometric design 179 00:08:19,800 --> 00:08:23,030 will get her trio of cookware top marks in the pottery. 180 00:08:23,100 --> 00:08:26,130 If you could go back to you back then, what would you tell her? 181 00:08:26,200 --> 00:08:28,630 Oh, I would tell her, "Be more confident." 182 00:08:28,700 --> 00:08:33,100 What do you think you of ten years from now would tell you now? 183 00:08:33,166 --> 00:08:35,296 Me now? "Be more confident." 184 00:08:36,467 --> 00:08:38,027 -Yes, exactly. -I know. 185 00:08:38,100 --> 00:08:40,630 -[McSweeney] As well as throwing confidently... -[sighs] 186 00:08:40,700 --> 00:08:42,800 ...the potters will need to work efficiently 187 00:08:42,867 --> 00:08:45,267 if they are to complete each cookware piece 188 00:08:45,333 --> 00:08:47,333 and give themselves enough time to dry 189 00:08:47,400 --> 00:08:49,300 before refining and decorating. 190 00:08:49,367 --> 00:08:53,097 Drying for this challenge is absolutely crucial. 191 00:08:53,166 --> 00:08:55,126 If your pieces aren't dry, you can't trim, 192 00:08:55,200 --> 00:08:58,130 and you won't be able to apply slip if they're not dry enough. 193 00:08:58,200 --> 00:09:00,070 Absolutely crucial to get it right. 194 00:09:00,133 --> 00:09:02,433 [McSweeney] Any thick bases or walls of their pots 195 00:09:02,500 --> 00:09:04,330 will require more drying time. 196 00:09:04,400 --> 00:09:06,930 [Alon] My fear is that the base will be thicker. 197 00:09:07,000 --> 00:09:10,200 I need to trim that off so that the whole thing doesn't crack. 198 00:09:10,266 --> 00:09:13,066 [McSweeney] But throw the pieces too thinly... 199 00:09:13,133 --> 00:09:14,403 Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah! 200 00:09:14,467 --> 00:09:16,297 ...and they risk collapsing. 201 00:09:17,300 --> 00:09:19,130 How are you doing, Sal? 202 00:09:19,200 --> 00:09:20,770 It started to sag, and now I'm drying it 203 00:09:20,834 --> 00:09:23,074 in order to try and stop it from sagging any more. 204 00:09:23,133 --> 00:09:24,733 Good woman. 205 00:09:24,800 --> 00:09:26,700 Don't you love terracotta? 206 00:09:26,767 --> 00:09:28,867 [McSweeney] As Sal struggles to keep her brick up... 207 00:09:28,934 --> 00:09:30,134 Stop. 208 00:09:30,200 --> 00:09:32,000 ...those brave enough to throw 209 00:09:32,066 --> 00:09:33,696 their chicken bricks in one... 210 00:09:33,767 --> 00:09:35,667 [Adam] My heart's racing so much. 211 00:09:35,734 --> 00:09:37,604 ...now face the challenge 212 00:09:37,667 --> 00:09:40,367 of closing the top without it collapsing. 213 00:09:40,433 --> 00:09:41,973 [Alon] Hopefully nothing will crack, 214 00:09:42,033 --> 00:09:43,733 nothing will warp, nothing will bend. 215 00:09:43,800 --> 00:09:47,570 [Henry] It's really soft clay, so it moves really easy. 216 00:09:47,633 --> 00:09:49,973 I don't want the sides to start shifting, 217 00:09:50,033 --> 00:09:52,633 which is my main concern, really. 218 00:09:52,700 --> 00:09:56,030 [Adam] Please close, please close. Stop shaking. 219 00:09:57,400 --> 00:10:00,870 [Alon] Boom, closed. Uno chicken bricko. 220 00:10:00,934 --> 00:10:03,034 [Henry] Absolutely brilliant. 221 00:10:03,100 --> 00:10:07,200 -[Adam] Oh, my God. I've actually done it. -[chuckles] 222 00:10:07,266 --> 00:10:11,166 I was bricking it, and now I'm bricking it. 223 00:10:11,233 --> 00:10:13,173 [McSweeney] Adam's cookware set will be embossed 224 00:10:13,233 --> 00:10:15,033 with simple human features 225 00:10:15,100 --> 00:10:17,600 in a tribute to the four generations of his family. 226 00:10:17,667 --> 00:10:23,597 So I've got my granddad, um, I've got my dad, and my new nephew, Theo, 227 00:10:23,667 --> 00:10:26,697 so this will be an heirloom that I can give to him. 228 00:10:26,767 --> 00:10:29,267 Hopefully, if it's any good. 229 00:10:29,333 --> 00:10:33,373 I've just got to get it from here to the drying room without falling over. [laughs] 230 00:10:33,433 --> 00:10:38,733 Potters of the Throw Down, that is one hour gone. 231 00:10:38,800 --> 00:10:40,470 One and a half hours to go. 232 00:10:40,533 --> 00:10:43,003 Oh, no. 233 00:10:43,066 --> 00:10:45,696 [McSweeney] As the chicken bricks head to the drying room... 234 00:10:45,767 --> 00:10:48,667 -[Henry] Sally, look. I did it. -[Sal] Ooh. You did it in one. 235 00:10:48,734 --> 00:10:51,204 -Yeah. Look at it. It's a brick. -[laughs] 236 00:10:51,266 --> 00:10:53,996 ...and the potters move on to throwing the casserole dish... 237 00:10:54,066 --> 00:10:55,666 Oh, come on. 238 00:10:55,734 --> 00:10:58,374 ...Shenyue has not yet left her wheel. 239 00:10:58,433 --> 00:11:00,733 I haven't had time to go to the drying room yet. 240 00:11:01,834 --> 00:11:03,804 But I will when I get a chance. 241 00:11:03,867 --> 00:11:06,897 If the potters thought the chicken brick was challenging... 242 00:11:06,967 --> 00:11:10,367 -[Peter] Get in there. -...then things aren't about to get any easier. 243 00:11:10,433 --> 00:11:11,973 [groans] 244 00:11:12,033 --> 00:11:15,573 The casserole dish not only has to be family-sized... 245 00:11:15,633 --> 00:11:18,233 It's so wide, and it's a lot taller than you think. 246 00:11:18,300 --> 00:11:20,670 ...but the potters need to build both the base 247 00:11:20,734 --> 00:11:23,274 and a lid that fits snugly together. 248 00:11:23,333 --> 00:11:25,603 Lots of measuring in this ceramics malarkey 249 00:11:25,667 --> 00:11:28,297 ‘cause you need to make sure that the two parts are going to fit together. 250 00:11:28,367 --> 00:11:30,327 There's risks everywhere. 251 00:11:30,400 --> 00:11:32,430 Is that family-sized? No, it's massive. 252 00:11:32,500 --> 00:11:35,100 Fit, like, three ducks in here. 253 00:11:35,166 --> 00:11:37,226 [McSweeney] Alon's striking set will feature 254 00:11:37,300 --> 00:11:39,530 decorative handles in the shape of lizards, 255 00:11:39,600 --> 00:11:41,730 the Israeli symbol for good luck. 256 00:11:41,800 --> 00:11:44,330 His set is dedicated to his childhood memories 257 00:11:44,400 --> 00:11:46,430 of cooking with his beloved grandma. 258 00:11:46,500 --> 00:11:48,530 [Alon] There's three pictures there. 259 00:11:48,600 --> 00:11:50,830 That's me in my grandma's kitchen, banging on the pots, 260 00:11:50,900 --> 00:11:53,830 -and then that's my grandma and me. -[Miller] Wow. 261 00:11:53,900 --> 00:11:55,800 And then that's me banging on the pots again. 262 00:11:55,867 --> 00:11:57,797 [Jones] There's a lot of personal connection with this. 263 00:11:57,867 --> 00:11:59,467 Absolutely, yeah. 264 00:11:59,533 --> 00:12:01,203 [McSweeney] Alon isn't the only potter 265 00:12:01,266 --> 00:12:02,896 inspired by their food heritage. 266 00:12:02,967 --> 00:12:05,527 Asian culture is all about food, 267 00:12:05,600 --> 00:12:08,330 so in China, if you see someone on the street, 268 00:12:08,400 --> 00:12:10,900 instead of saying, "How are you?" 269 00:12:10,967 --> 00:12:13,797 they ask, "Have you eaten yet?" That's just what you say. 270 00:12:13,867 --> 00:12:17,327 Shenyue will be keeping her decoration simple, 271 00:12:17,400 --> 00:12:19,830 using the Japanese technique hakeme, 272 00:12:19,900 --> 00:12:23,530 where white slip is applied in bold, broad brushstrokes. 273 00:12:23,600 --> 00:12:25,430 The brushstrokes are quite crucial, 274 00:12:25,500 --> 00:12:27,430 'cause obviously you can only make them once 275 00:12:27,500 --> 00:12:29,700 and if you go over it, it doesn't look right. 276 00:12:29,767 --> 00:12:32,967 So you want to still see the clay underneath and its colour. 277 00:12:33,033 --> 00:12:36,433 There really is nowhere to hide going down that route. 278 00:12:36,500 --> 00:12:39,570 You're laying bare all of those materials and that decoration. 279 00:12:39,633 --> 00:12:42,203 -Yeah. Simple but effective. -Yeah, hopefully. 280 00:12:42,266 --> 00:12:45,526 So have you done your chicken brick already? 281 00:12:45,600 --> 00:12:47,130 [Shenyue] I've done the two halves of it. 282 00:12:47,200 --> 00:12:49,430 -[Jones] I see. -[Shenyue] I'm gonna join it later. 283 00:12:49,500 --> 00:12:51,030 You're not using the drying room then? 284 00:12:51,100 --> 00:12:53,330 Well, I thought the time 285 00:12:53,400 --> 00:12:55,930 it would take me to get there and come back... 286 00:12:56,000 --> 00:12:58,900 -You know, it's very far. -It's only over there. 287 00:12:58,967 --> 00:13:00,567 -[Shenyue] Yeah. -[Jones] It's not that far. 288 00:13:00,633 --> 00:13:02,573 I just thought, with the heat gun, 289 00:13:02,633 --> 00:13:05,073 what you can do in the drying room in, like, an hour, 290 00:13:05,133 --> 00:13:07,333 you can do with a heat gun in two minutes. 291 00:13:07,400 --> 00:13:10,800 -Okay. Fair enough. Your decision. -Yeah. 292 00:13:10,867 --> 00:13:12,927 [McSweeney] To create a perfectly fitting casserole lid, 293 00:13:13,000 --> 00:13:16,270 the judges have asked for a flange and gallery fitting. 294 00:13:16,333 --> 00:13:18,503 This little lip here is a flange, 295 00:13:18,567 --> 00:13:21,767 and this will rest on top of my casserole dish. 296 00:13:21,834 --> 00:13:23,204 [Alon] No! 297 00:13:24,300 --> 00:13:26,430 The flange broke. 298 00:13:26,500 --> 00:13:29,400 [McSweeney] As Alon deals with a broken flange... 299 00:13:30,066 --> 00:13:31,666 Having fun. 300 00:13:31,734 --> 00:13:34,374 ...Henry is having more luck with his. 301 00:13:34,433 --> 00:13:38,073 So I just measured my, uh... flange? Is this a flange? 302 00:13:38,133 --> 00:13:40,873 -[Jones] Yeah. -[Henry] That will fit on top of the casserole, 303 00:13:40,934 --> 00:13:43,404 -which will be good. -[Jones] You're thinking about the shrinkage as well? 304 00:13:43,467 --> 00:13:46,527 Yeah, my old uni teacher used to tell me that, 305 00:13:46,600 --> 00:13:49,770 "As long as they're a rattling good fit, you'll be all right." 306 00:13:49,834 --> 00:13:52,474 [McSweeney] Henry's well-fitting lids will be decorated 307 00:13:52,533 --> 00:13:56,403 with a very personal sgraffito design based on his many tattoos. 308 00:13:56,467 --> 00:14:00,027 -Here's my leg. [grunts] -[Jones] Oh, okay. 309 00:14:00,100 --> 00:14:02,870 I've got tattoos all over my leg, which is really good. 310 00:14:02,934 --> 00:14:05,534 -[McSweeney] Who did them? -I did them. 311 00:14:05,600 --> 00:14:09,470 I design them and I tattoo myself with stick and poke needle. 312 00:14:09,533 --> 00:14:12,673 I kind of like the idea. It's very contemporary with the tattoo. 313 00:14:12,734 --> 00:14:15,234 And, you know, on traditional sort of cooking items... 314 00:14:15,300 --> 00:14:17,400 Yeah, I like how it's merging the two. 315 00:14:17,467 --> 00:14:19,227 ...it could work really well. 316 00:14:19,300 --> 00:14:21,000 Could work really well. 317 00:14:22,667 --> 00:14:26,127 -Potters, you have half an hour left. -Brilliant. 318 00:14:26,200 --> 00:14:29,630 [McSweeney] With their casserole lids done, the potters can move on 319 00:14:29,700 --> 00:14:32,030 to the third and final piece of cookware. 320 00:14:32,100 --> 00:14:34,100 [Shenyue] This is a tagine base. 321 00:14:34,166 --> 00:14:35,866 As you can see, it's quite large. 322 00:14:35,934 --> 00:14:37,774 [McSweeney] And, like the casserole dish, 323 00:14:37,834 --> 00:14:40,304 the judges will be expecting the perfect fit. 324 00:14:40,367 --> 00:14:42,497 So that's the gallery there, 325 00:14:42,567 --> 00:14:46,427 and the lid sits down in there like that. 326 00:14:48,834 --> 00:14:50,204 I hope. [laughs] 327 00:14:50,266 --> 00:14:52,226 [McSweeney] The conical tagine lid 328 00:14:52,300 --> 00:14:55,200 requires the potters to throw high and wide. 329 00:14:55,266 --> 00:14:57,226 [Henry] Some people are throwing it upside down 330 00:14:57,300 --> 00:14:59,200 instead of throwing it outwards, 331 00:14:59,266 --> 00:15:01,996 but I practised that, and it just keeps flopping over, 332 00:15:02,066 --> 00:15:04,826 so I'm gonna throw it wide and cone it in and seal it at the top. 333 00:15:04,900 --> 00:15:07,130 When you're pulling this way, 334 00:15:07,200 --> 00:15:11,000 because you're coming inwards, you're making the pot stronger. 335 00:15:11,066 --> 00:15:12,566 Who needs a tagine this big? 336 00:15:13,800 --> 00:15:15,070 It's got an echo. 337 00:15:15,133 --> 00:15:17,573 Twenty-nine. That'll do. 338 00:15:19,800 --> 00:15:22,630 Be careful, be careful, be careful. Ah! 339 00:15:22,700 --> 00:15:25,000 [McSweeney] As the tagine lids hit the drying room... 340 00:15:25,066 --> 00:15:26,496 -Just behind you, Peter. -[Peter] Okay. 341 00:15:26,567 --> 00:15:29,427 ...the five chicken bricks thrown in two pieces 342 00:15:29,500 --> 00:15:31,600 should now be dry enough to join together. 343 00:15:31,667 --> 00:15:34,327 Moment of truth. Is it firm enough? 344 00:15:36,200 --> 00:15:38,370 Does it fit, and is it... 345 00:15:40,867 --> 00:15:42,667 -Hi, Shenyue. -Hi, Siobhán. 346 00:15:42,734 --> 00:15:44,534 Have you got nearly everything done? 347 00:15:44,600 --> 00:15:46,400 Yeah, I'm joining my chicken brick now. 348 00:15:46,467 --> 00:15:49,067 Good for you. Is anything in the drying room at all? 349 00:15:49,133 --> 00:15:50,733 No, nothing's in the drying room. 350 00:15:50,800 --> 00:15:53,300 You'll have it all in before the time is up, right? 351 00:15:53,367 --> 00:15:55,327 Oh, yeah, yeah. Definitely. 352 00:15:55,400 --> 00:15:58,530 Great. Okay, so... There we go. 353 00:15:58,600 --> 00:16:01,900 Oh, wow. Good for you. That's brilliant. 354 00:16:01,967 --> 00:16:03,467 [McSweeney] And, as two become one... 355 00:16:03,533 --> 00:16:05,373 I think it's joined all right, actually. 356 00:16:05,433 --> 00:16:06,873 So massive. 357 00:16:06,934 --> 00:16:09,274 ...Sal is not confident that the bottom half 358 00:16:09,333 --> 00:16:11,933 she threw earlier is up to scratch. 359 00:16:12,000 --> 00:16:16,070 I'm re-throwing the chicken brick. It wasn't good. 360 00:16:17,200 --> 00:16:20,270 Potters, you have ten minutes left. 361 00:16:20,333 --> 00:16:22,133 Handles, handles, handles, handles, handles. 362 00:16:22,200 --> 00:16:25,770 All of your items need to be in the drying room 363 00:16:25,834 --> 00:16:27,574 in the next ten minutes. 364 00:16:27,633 --> 00:16:29,873 This is not fake panic. This is proper panic. 365 00:16:29,934 --> 00:16:31,404 [McSweeney] So, what are these for? 366 00:16:31,467 --> 00:16:33,727 -Oh, she's off. Cheerio. -The handle. 367 00:16:33,800 --> 00:16:35,600 Whoa, thank you. 368 00:16:35,667 --> 00:16:37,027 Look at her run. 369 00:16:37,100 --> 00:16:38,600 [Alon] I'm worried Keith might say 370 00:16:38,667 --> 00:16:41,297 they're a bit fragile and not robust enough. 371 00:16:41,367 --> 00:16:43,227 -How's it going? -[Rose] All right. 372 00:16:43,300 --> 00:16:44,730 Got most of the stuff in the drying room. 373 00:16:44,800 --> 00:16:48,130 -Nice, nice. Good. -Got one empty shelf. 374 00:16:48,200 --> 00:16:51,170 -Whose shelf is empty? -Shenyue. 375 00:16:51,233 --> 00:16:53,203 [Shenyue] I might not get mine done. 376 00:16:53,266 --> 00:16:54,996 You all right? Anything I can do? 377 00:16:55,066 --> 00:16:58,726 If you could put my stuff in the drying room, that would be amazing. 378 00:16:58,800 --> 00:17:00,100 You're the best. 379 00:17:01,200 --> 00:17:03,170 I might be in a parallel universe, 380 00:17:03,233 --> 00:17:06,503 'cause I've finished and no one else has. 381 00:17:06,567 --> 00:17:08,467 Adam, have you finished? 382 00:17:08,533 --> 00:17:10,533 -[Adam] Yeah, I know. What the hell is going on? -What? 383 00:17:10,600 --> 00:17:13,600 -You do realise it's a competition, right? -Oh, God. 384 00:17:13,667 --> 00:17:15,667 Last 60 seconds. 385 00:17:15,734 --> 00:17:17,534 Okay, that's it, I'm done. 386 00:17:19,333 --> 00:17:21,233 Just do my handles, and that's it. 387 00:17:21,300 --> 00:17:23,700 [McSweeney] Shenyue's coming down with her tagine. 388 00:17:23,767 --> 00:17:25,667 -I'm done. -[McSweeney] You're done, Hannah? 389 00:17:25,734 --> 00:17:27,404 I was just about to send you good vibes. 390 00:17:27,467 --> 00:17:29,397 -You don't need them. -[laughs] 391 00:17:29,467 --> 00:17:35,127 Five, four, three, two, one. 392 00:17:35,200 --> 00:17:38,230 Down tools, please. That's it. 393 00:17:38,300 --> 00:17:40,330 -Oh, God. -Well done, everyone. 394 00:17:41,333 --> 00:17:43,633 It went right down to the wire. 395 00:17:43,700 --> 00:17:46,170 Um, I was cutting up the shapes for the handles 396 00:17:46,233 --> 00:17:49,033 as they were saying, "Everything into the drying room." 397 00:17:49,100 --> 00:17:50,770 So it was very tight. [chuckles] 398 00:17:50,834 --> 00:17:53,474 [McSweeney] The terracotta pots will now be left to dry 399 00:17:53,533 --> 00:17:58,273 for a further three hours before the potters return to refine and decorate. 400 00:17:58,333 --> 00:18:00,633 I was just happy to have everything in the drying room. 401 00:18:00,700 --> 00:18:04,030 I'm just really worried about them not being dry enough. 402 00:18:10,533 --> 00:18:12,533 [McSweeney] Terracotta Week continues in the pottery, 403 00:18:12,600 --> 00:18:15,370 as our potters must face a second challenge 404 00:18:15,433 --> 00:18:18,133 and a second chance to impress the judges. 405 00:18:20,100 --> 00:18:23,800 Potters, your second challenge this week is a spot test. 406 00:18:23,867 --> 00:18:28,627 Rich would like you to tell the story of your life... 407 00:18:28,700 --> 00:18:30,030 -Ooh. -...in clay. 408 00:18:30,100 --> 00:18:31,530 [Miller] I would like you... 409 00:18:31,600 --> 00:18:33,400 -[contestants gasp] -Oh, my word. 410 00:18:33,467 --> 00:18:37,427 ...to tell your personal story in a set of six tiles. 411 00:18:37,500 --> 00:18:40,800 On my panel, I've celebrated my heritage. 412 00:18:40,867 --> 00:18:44,697 Down in this corner, I've got the Victoria Regia lily, 413 00:18:44,767 --> 00:18:47,597 which is the national flower of Guyana. 414 00:18:47,667 --> 00:18:50,167 That's where my dad was from. 415 00:18:50,233 --> 00:18:54,673 And I've got a bee, which is for my daughter, Beatrice, but we call her Bee. 416 00:18:54,734 --> 00:18:57,934 A mug. Had to have a mug. Celebrate my ceramics. 417 00:18:58,000 --> 00:19:02,200 And we've got the Welsh dragon, sort of celebrating my Welsh heritage. 418 00:19:02,266 --> 00:19:04,696 You've all got six leather hard terracotta tiles, 419 00:19:04,767 --> 00:19:06,727 and I can't wait to see what you do. 420 00:19:06,800 --> 00:19:09,430 [McSweeney] Okay, potters, back to your benches, please. 421 00:19:09,500 --> 00:19:14,230 You have 60 minutes to make your six-tile frieze, 422 00:19:14,300 --> 00:19:16,230 and your time starts... 423 00:19:17,500 --> 00:19:18,670 now. 424 00:19:20,200 --> 00:19:23,070 I love this task. Really looking forward to it. 425 00:19:23,133 --> 00:19:25,173 I'm really happy to be doing it. 426 00:19:25,233 --> 00:19:28,733 I'm just a little bit worried, 'cause I'm not the best decorator. 427 00:19:28,800 --> 00:19:31,130 [Peter] Putting a story together is completely different. 428 00:19:31,200 --> 00:19:33,100 Let's go for it. [laughs] 429 00:19:33,166 --> 00:19:35,596 [McSweeney] To tell the stories of their lives in clay, 430 00:19:35,667 --> 00:19:38,867 many of the potters' thoughts turn straight to home. 431 00:19:38,934 --> 00:19:40,974 Brighton is a really, really big part of my life, 432 00:19:41,033 --> 00:19:44,803 so I've got the West Pier, which is an iconic Brighton landmark. 433 00:19:44,867 --> 00:19:49,997 Um, I like being in the sea, so we've got a wave with a boat on it. 434 00:19:50,066 --> 00:19:53,226 I might put some gardening in there too because I'm an avid gardener, 435 00:19:53,300 --> 00:19:56,200 so I might wrangle some plants in down in the bottom corner here. 436 00:19:56,266 --> 00:19:57,826 [McSweeney] Adam's not the only one 437 00:19:57,900 --> 00:20:00,070 planning some foliage in their design. 438 00:20:00,133 --> 00:20:03,303 I'm doing plants that represent 439 00:20:03,367 --> 00:20:07,067 different places that I have lived. 440 00:20:07,133 --> 00:20:09,633 In, uh, Kathmandu, where I grew up, 441 00:20:09,700 --> 00:20:12,170 we always had banana trees in the back garden. 442 00:20:12,233 --> 00:20:15,633 I love drawing plants. They just remind me of home in different ways. 443 00:20:15,700 --> 00:20:19,930 [McSweeney] And for Sal, a chance to remember the time she spent living in Canada. 444 00:20:20,000 --> 00:20:24,100 There's Canadian maple leaves in this corner, um, falling, 445 00:20:24,166 --> 00:20:27,566 'cause that's the best time of year, the fall, when the colours are fabulous. 446 00:20:27,633 --> 00:20:30,933 When I'm in Canada, the thing I love doing most of all is playing golf, 447 00:20:31,000 --> 00:20:34,130 so I've got a couple of golf clubs, golf ball. 448 00:20:34,200 --> 00:20:37,470 They're in order of preference. The most important things. 449 00:20:37,533 --> 00:20:42,003 You know, there's my partner, my dogs, my home, and Canada. 450 00:20:42,066 --> 00:20:45,426 [McSweeney] But for Henry, his planning is not, well, going to plan. 451 00:20:45,500 --> 00:20:47,900 I haven't really got a plan. 452 00:20:47,967 --> 00:20:52,127 I've suddenly gone brain-dead, and I can't think of any sort of design to do. 453 00:20:52,200 --> 00:20:54,300 They say, "Tell a story about your life," but... 454 00:20:55,867 --> 00:20:58,797 I don't really have-- I don't really know what to do at all. 455 00:20:58,867 --> 00:21:00,897 [Hannah] Don't think too much about it, Henry. 456 00:21:00,967 --> 00:21:03,367 Good advice, actually. I'm not gonna think too much about it. 457 00:21:03,433 --> 00:21:06,833 [McSweeney] For our youngest potter, Alon, a different problem. 458 00:21:06,900 --> 00:21:08,730 I don't have a life story. 459 00:21:08,800 --> 00:21:11,170 I'm only 20. I haven't lived too much. 460 00:21:11,233 --> 00:21:15,173 I'm going to do a pot to represent cooking and a world map. 461 00:21:15,233 --> 00:21:18,903 I've moved a lot growing up, from Israel to England. We moved quite a bit, 462 00:21:18,967 --> 00:21:21,597 so I sort of want to show that as well. 463 00:21:21,667 --> 00:21:26,227 What happens between, like, Asia and Australia? I just... 464 00:21:26,300 --> 00:21:30,800 I'm gonna cover that area 'cause I just don't know what happens there. [laughs] 465 00:21:30,867 --> 00:21:33,327 Oh, I'll cover it with a plane. That's what I'll do. 466 00:21:33,400 --> 00:21:36,330 [McSweeney] As Alon figures out what will cover his tiles, 467 00:21:36,400 --> 00:21:38,970 Peter has a bit more life experience to draw on. 468 00:21:39,033 --> 00:21:40,833 [Peter] I have a big extended family. 469 00:21:40,900 --> 00:21:42,900 You know, you get a dandelion, 470 00:21:42,967 --> 00:21:45,267 a big fluffy dandelion, and you blow it, 471 00:21:45,333 --> 00:21:48,273 and all the seeds blow out, and it's like, you know, 472 00:21:48,333 --> 00:21:51,673 you make a wish for happiness and success in your family. 473 00:21:51,734 --> 00:21:54,034 So, you know, that's going to be quite a big part of it. 474 00:21:54,100 --> 00:21:56,370 It's funny, 'cause it's like, the stuff I do at home, 475 00:21:56,433 --> 00:21:58,203 I know exactly what I'm doing, 476 00:21:58,266 --> 00:22:00,526 like, a week before I go out there and do it. 477 00:22:00,600 --> 00:22:02,530 It's all well-planned. Not like this, 478 00:22:02,600 --> 00:22:05,830 where you suddenly just think, "Oh, okay." [chuckles] 479 00:22:05,900 --> 00:22:10,870 I'm trying to make things look a bit in the foreground 480 00:22:10,934 --> 00:22:14,804 and the background, by giving them different depths. 481 00:22:14,867 --> 00:22:16,127 Who's this lady? 482 00:22:16,200 --> 00:22:18,870 This is a traditional Welsh lady. 483 00:22:18,934 --> 00:22:22,874 -Oh! -Every Saint David's Day in Wales, 484 00:22:22,934 --> 00:22:24,404 they make us dress up like this. 485 00:22:24,467 --> 00:22:25,997 [both laugh] 486 00:22:26,066 --> 00:22:28,496 -It's the law? -It is the law, yeah. 487 00:22:28,567 --> 00:22:32,027 When I was in school, all the boys used to go as miners, 488 00:22:32,100 --> 00:22:33,930 but these days they go as rugby players. 489 00:22:34,000 --> 00:22:35,300 They go as the Stereophonics? 490 00:22:35,367 --> 00:22:37,397 -[both laugh] -Yeah, yeah, pretty much. 491 00:22:37,467 --> 00:22:40,367 [McSweeney] Is this very much your comfort range here? 492 00:22:40,433 --> 00:22:43,333 -I'm in my happy place here. Yeah, yeah. -You're in your happy place. 493 00:22:43,400 --> 00:22:48,770 [loud whisper] Potters, you have half an hour left. 494 00:22:48,834 --> 00:22:50,674 Oh, my God. 495 00:22:50,734 --> 00:22:53,574 [McSweeney] As the other potters' tiles come together, 496 00:22:53,633 --> 00:22:56,633 Henry has finally made a decision about his design. 497 00:22:56,700 --> 00:22:59,670 [Henry] Decision is just, draw a load of things that interest me. 498 00:22:59,734 --> 00:23:01,604 It's gonna be kind of like my tattoos in a way 499 00:23:01,667 --> 00:23:04,467 that it will be kind of a big group of random things. 500 00:23:04,533 --> 00:23:06,373 More about the process than the final image. 501 00:23:06,433 --> 00:23:08,333 Fingers crossed that will be enough. 502 00:23:08,400 --> 00:23:10,400 The valleys are very, very famous 503 00:23:10,467 --> 00:23:12,967 for having rows and rows and rows of terraced houses, 504 00:23:13,033 --> 00:23:15,703 and that's the house I grew up in, was an old miner's house, 505 00:23:15,767 --> 00:23:18,767 so I wanted to represent my upbringing as well. 506 00:23:18,834 --> 00:23:21,904 I've got test tubes to represent 507 00:23:22,000 --> 00:23:24,130 my science degree that I did. 508 00:23:24,200 --> 00:23:29,500 Micrometres and dividers symbolic of starting out in engineering. 509 00:23:29,567 --> 00:23:31,997 As usual, running out of time. 510 00:23:32,066 --> 00:23:34,696 At the minute, I'm just trying to carve 511 00:23:34,767 --> 00:23:36,597 what looks like a skateboard. 512 00:23:36,667 --> 00:23:39,997 Don't think I'm gonna have enough time to put in any of my other bits. 513 00:23:41,133 --> 00:23:45,003 Potters, you have ten minutes left. 514 00:23:45,066 --> 00:23:48,426 Oh, I know what I could do. Let's do some patterns. 515 00:23:48,500 --> 00:23:51,670 There's no time, and now I'm panicking, 516 00:23:51,734 --> 00:23:56,034 and this isn't fun any more. [laughs] 517 00:23:56,100 --> 00:23:59,300 [McSweeney] Okay, guys, remember, put them into the frames. 518 00:23:59,367 --> 00:24:02,427 That's going to take up a little bit of time, 519 00:24:02,500 --> 00:24:05,070 -and it has to be done before the end... -Come on. 520 00:24:05,133 --> 00:24:06,273 ...of the session. 521 00:24:07,767 --> 00:24:10,697 -Henry, ten seconds left, lovey. -Oh, good. 522 00:24:10,767 --> 00:24:12,267 [exclaims] 523 00:24:13,367 --> 00:24:18,827 Okay, potters, that is time up. 524 00:24:18,900 --> 00:24:22,770 Step away from your friezes, please. 525 00:24:22,834 --> 00:24:24,404 Mine is so bad. 526 00:24:27,567 --> 00:24:30,267 [McSweeney] Keith and Rich are looking for six carved tiles 527 00:24:30,333 --> 00:24:33,233 that tell them something about the potters' lives. 528 00:24:36,233 --> 00:24:38,203 This is Brighton and what Brighton is to me. 529 00:24:38,266 --> 00:24:40,966 This is me and Daniel bobbing around in a boat, 530 00:24:41,033 --> 00:24:43,303 and then in the background we've got the beach huts. 531 00:24:43,367 --> 00:24:45,597 We always walk to the West Pier, 532 00:24:45,667 --> 00:24:48,897 very iconically Brighton, um, as is the Pavilion. 533 00:24:48,967 --> 00:24:52,797 Wow. This is just inspired. It's like a Hokusai wave. 534 00:24:52,867 --> 00:24:56,027 Wherever you look, there's quality mark-making and quality carving. 535 00:24:56,100 --> 00:24:59,230 [Jones] Which shows to me that you planned this out really, really well. 536 00:25:02,367 --> 00:25:04,997 This propeller and the clouds represents 537 00:25:05,066 --> 00:25:07,166 my journeys around the world and my flying career. 538 00:25:07,233 --> 00:25:08,903 A few engineering tools. 539 00:25:08,967 --> 00:25:11,467 This here is a dandelion that you blow... 540 00:25:11,533 --> 00:25:13,633 -Oh, okay. Yeah. -...and you make a wish. 541 00:25:13,700 --> 00:25:16,030 What you've decided to create really comes through. 542 00:25:16,100 --> 00:25:17,700 You've got very clear sections. 543 00:25:17,767 --> 00:25:19,597 I think if you'd have had something in the background, 544 00:25:19,667 --> 00:25:21,467 perhaps it would've just pulled it all together, 545 00:25:21,533 --> 00:25:23,573 but I love the story and I love the clarity 546 00:25:23,633 --> 00:25:26,033 of your concept coming through in the design. 547 00:25:28,467 --> 00:25:32,227 There's a world map because I did a lot of travelling in my gap year. 548 00:25:32,300 --> 00:25:34,530 There's a pot boiling over to represent-- 549 00:25:34,600 --> 00:25:36,500 -[Jones] Your love of cooking. -[Alon] Yeah, exactly. 550 00:25:36,567 --> 00:25:39,867 -And, of course, we have the ubiquitous whale here. -[all chuckle] 551 00:25:39,934 --> 00:25:41,934 -It wouldn't be Alon without a whale. -Exactly. 552 00:25:42,000 --> 00:25:43,730 Obviously, there's a bit more detail on this side. 553 00:25:43,800 --> 00:25:46,800 It would've been nice to see more structure and depth. 554 00:25:46,867 --> 00:25:49,227 If you'd have carved a little more away through here 555 00:25:49,300 --> 00:25:51,470 to get sort of a more three-dimensional feel 556 00:25:51,533 --> 00:25:54,803 and perhaps made the most of the overall depth of the tiles. 557 00:25:57,266 --> 00:25:59,696 The one thing I would say is it might have been nice 558 00:25:59,767 --> 00:26:03,097 to have seen a bit more form in some of the pieces, 559 00:26:03,166 --> 00:26:05,026 Because when you think about a test tube, 560 00:26:05,100 --> 00:26:07,130 you think of that lovely, rounded, shiny, 561 00:26:07,200 --> 00:26:09,330 polished, pristine glass form, 562 00:26:09,400 --> 00:26:12,030 and perhaps they're kind of a little flat. 563 00:26:14,400 --> 00:26:16,570 [Sal] When I'm in Canada, I play a lot of golf. 564 00:26:16,633 --> 00:26:20,003 And then the background morphs into my Cornish landscape, 565 00:26:20,066 --> 00:26:24,266 and the thing that links both Canada and England, of course, is my pottery. 566 00:26:24,333 --> 00:26:27,103 The way you've kind of morphed each aspect into each other, 567 00:26:27,166 --> 00:26:29,096 it almost feels like a piece of collage. 568 00:26:29,166 --> 00:26:31,526 You really get a sense of that variance in material. 569 00:26:31,600 --> 00:26:34,570 You know that's a flat leaf. you know that feels all rocky. 570 00:26:34,633 --> 00:26:37,203 -I just think it's worked really well, Sal. -Thank you. 571 00:26:39,567 --> 00:26:42,167 This was going to be the webbing of a trampoline 572 00:26:42,233 --> 00:26:45,003 and then waves and sand from Cornwall. 573 00:26:45,066 --> 00:26:47,726 The overall impression that one gets is that it's not finished. 574 00:26:47,800 --> 00:26:49,670 -Yeah. -[Miller] What we can see here, 575 00:26:49,734 --> 00:26:51,704 despite the fact that it's not finished, 576 00:26:51,767 --> 00:26:55,497 is some really strong, bold use of patterns, textures. 577 00:26:55,567 --> 00:26:58,267 I think the direction it was going in is really interesting. 578 00:27:00,767 --> 00:27:04,067 I love the concept, and a lot of these leaves are really recognisable. 579 00:27:04,133 --> 00:27:06,203 That really, like, strong graphic quality. 580 00:27:06,266 --> 00:27:09,826 I would say perhaps it doesn't make the most of the depth of the tiles 581 00:27:09,900 --> 00:27:12,900 because it feels like it's sort of very much on the surface. 582 00:27:12,967 --> 00:27:15,597 [Jones] Just a bit more definition and a bit more dimension 583 00:27:15,667 --> 00:27:17,227 -would've been nice. Yeah. -Yeah. 584 00:27:19,400 --> 00:27:23,370 This is my life in the valleys represented in my tiles. 585 00:27:23,433 --> 00:27:26,733 Rows and rows of terraced houses where all the miners used to live. 586 00:27:26,800 --> 00:27:30,530 The music notes representing the music that comes out of the valleys. 587 00:27:30,600 --> 00:27:34,600 The Welsh maid is so integral to Welsh culture, 588 00:27:34,667 --> 00:27:36,497 and you've got it down to a T. 589 00:27:36,567 --> 00:27:38,597 -Absolutely wonderful. -Thank you. 590 00:27:38,667 --> 00:27:43,097 [McSweeney] Keith and Rich must now rank the potters from worst to best. 591 00:27:43,166 --> 00:27:45,666 In eighth place, we have... 592 00:27:47,934 --> 00:27:50,034 Henry. 593 00:27:50,100 --> 00:27:52,170 Just perhaps a bit too much time thinking 594 00:27:52,233 --> 00:27:54,503 and not enough time carving. 595 00:27:54,567 --> 00:27:58,597 In seventh place, we have Alon. 596 00:27:58,667 --> 00:28:00,767 I think it was just a little bit flat. 597 00:28:00,834 --> 00:28:03,304 [McSweeney] Hannah is sixth, Peter is fifth, 598 00:28:03,367 --> 00:28:05,967 Shenyue fourth, and Adam third, 599 00:28:06,033 --> 00:28:09,573 leaving Jodie and Sal vying for the top spot. 600 00:28:09,633 --> 00:28:11,073 In second place... 601 00:28:14,533 --> 00:28:16,503 Jodie. 602 00:28:16,567 --> 00:28:19,367 Really lovely set of tiles, Jodie. 603 00:28:19,433 --> 00:28:22,403 In first place, we have Sal. 604 00:28:22,467 --> 00:28:26,127 A wonderful set of tiles. You've used the tools in very different 605 00:28:26,200 --> 00:28:27,970 but it still feels so of you. 606 00:28:28,033 --> 00:28:31,433 And you've really used that depth of the tile, and that's what I was after. 607 00:28:31,500 --> 00:28:33,030 -Really well done. -Thank you. 608 00:28:36,767 --> 00:28:40,267 It was really lovely to hear Rich talk about my tiles in such a nice way. 609 00:28:40,333 --> 00:28:42,433 I mean, he is Mr. Tile, isn't he? 610 00:28:42,500 --> 00:28:46,030 [Jodie] If you do well in the second challenge, you feel a little bit safer. 611 00:28:46,100 --> 00:28:49,000 But, yeah, it's the next bit now, isn't it? It could all fall apart. 612 00:28:49,066 --> 00:28:50,366 [laughs] 613 00:28:55,233 --> 00:28:56,703 [McSweeney] After a few hours of drying, 614 00:28:56,767 --> 00:28:58,997 the potters' trio of terracotta cookware 615 00:28:59,066 --> 00:29:00,526 should be leather-hard... 616 00:29:00,600 --> 00:29:02,670 Ooh, it's actually quite firm. 617 00:29:02,734 --> 00:29:04,974 ...and ready to refine and decorate. 618 00:29:05,033 --> 00:29:07,403 -Ooh, they're nice and dry. -Are they? 619 00:29:07,467 --> 00:29:09,097 -Yeah. -Mm, mine aren't. 620 00:29:09,166 --> 00:29:11,166 Ooh, it's so heavy. 621 00:29:11,233 --> 00:29:13,233 [McSweeney] Trimming the clay not only refines 622 00:29:13,300 --> 00:29:15,030 the form of their pieces, 623 00:29:15,100 --> 00:29:16,670 but also takes out the excess weight... 624 00:29:16,734 --> 00:29:18,504 [Peter] It's quite heavy at the minute. 625 00:29:18,567 --> 00:29:21,097 ...which could cause stress cracks in the kiln. 626 00:29:21,166 --> 00:29:22,696 Trying to be careful with this one. 627 00:29:22,767 --> 00:29:26,467 But make the walls too thin, and they risk collapse. 628 00:29:26,533 --> 00:29:29,203 If it breaks now, disaster. 629 00:29:30,300 --> 00:29:32,100 Aah! 630 00:29:32,166 --> 00:29:36,726 Hey! It fits. Yeah. 631 00:29:36,800 --> 00:29:38,930 [McSweeney] The potters will be decorating 632 00:29:39,000 --> 00:29:41,700 directly on to raw clay using coloured slip. 633 00:29:41,767 --> 00:29:44,197 I think I'm going to white-slip it and then 634 00:29:44,266 --> 00:29:46,596 put some kind of greeny kind of bluish background, 635 00:29:46,667 --> 00:29:49,927 and then I've got some stamps to put stars on, kind of inspired by tiles. 636 00:29:50,000 --> 00:29:52,870 [McSweeney] The judges are expecting beautiful decoration 637 00:29:52,934 --> 00:29:55,674 that ties the cookware pieces together as a set. 638 00:29:55,734 --> 00:29:59,304 These are stencils made out of tissue paper. 639 00:29:59,367 --> 00:30:02,197 I've put some slip on the tissue paper as well. 640 00:30:02,266 --> 00:30:04,466 That's going to dry off slightly. 641 00:30:04,533 --> 00:30:08,173 And then when I apply that, it'll leave some of the slip, 642 00:30:08,233 --> 00:30:10,573 but it'll also take a lot of it with it as well. 643 00:30:10,633 --> 00:30:13,973 This is the fun bit. I've been looking forward to this bit. 644 00:30:14,033 --> 00:30:17,303 [McSweeney] As Sal delicately carves out her Inuit-inspired design... 645 00:30:17,367 --> 00:30:21,527 Sgraffito-ing out the bear, so I'm taking away the white slip 646 00:30:21,600 --> 00:30:25,400 and making him slightly in relief, as it were. 647 00:30:25,467 --> 00:30:28,927 ...Shenyue is taking a more simplistic approach. 648 00:30:29,000 --> 00:30:32,230 [Shenyue] I want to still be able to see quite a lot of the 649 00:30:32,300 --> 00:30:34,500 I think it's such a stunning, um, clay. 650 00:30:34,567 --> 00:30:37,267 It would be a shame to cover a lot of it up. 651 00:30:37,333 --> 00:30:39,873 [Alon] It's this Japanese technique called tobiganna. 652 00:30:39,934 --> 00:30:44,174 You move the slip away and expose the terracotta underneath. 653 00:30:44,233 --> 00:30:48,133 Are you, like, pretending that you're launching your own cookware? 654 00:30:48,200 --> 00:30:50,130 -Yes. [chuckles] -Your terracotta cookware? 655 00:30:50,200 --> 00:30:52,000 What shop would it go into, do you think? 656 00:30:52,066 --> 00:30:54,796 Ooh, I don't know. What, uh, like a bougie shop? 657 00:30:54,867 --> 00:30:57,597 -A bougie shop? Please, like I'd know. -[laughs] 658 00:30:59,500 --> 00:31:03,000 Halfway through, potters! Halfway through! 659 00:31:03,066 --> 00:31:06,526 Not enough time. [exclaims] 660 00:31:06,600 --> 00:31:08,430 [McSweeney] An hour and a half into the challenge, 661 00:31:08,500 --> 00:31:11,070 and the pottery is awash with colour. 662 00:31:11,133 --> 00:31:12,973 [Sal] I have cobalt, which is blue, 663 00:31:13,033 --> 00:31:16,633 copper, which is green, turquoise, and red iron. 664 00:31:16,700 --> 00:31:18,830 Keeping it as authentic as I can 665 00:31:18,900 --> 00:31:21,870 to what would've been available to the Inuit people. 666 00:31:21,934 --> 00:31:24,934 [McSweeney] But one potter is still trying to lose weight. 667 00:31:25,000 --> 00:31:28,930 So I'm still trimming, um, my tagine lid at the minute. 668 00:31:29,000 --> 00:31:33,230 Thinner than it is now is my aim. Just to get it thinner. 669 00:31:33,300 --> 00:31:36,800 [McSweeney] Henry isn't the only one who hasn't started decoration. 670 00:31:36,867 --> 00:31:40,267 Peter's tricky horseshoe handles are taking up valuable time. 671 00:31:40,333 --> 00:31:42,933 [Peter] This is just the back of the seat. 672 00:31:43,000 --> 00:31:46,930 If you imagine you got a saddle, that bit's going to sit there. 673 00:31:47,000 --> 00:31:49,700 I haven't done the glazing, I haven't done the decorating yet. 674 00:31:49,767 --> 00:31:51,567 But I'm not panicking. 675 00:31:51,633 --> 00:31:53,973 [laughs] I lie. 676 00:31:54,033 --> 00:31:57,073 [McSweeney] Peter might not have added colour just yet, 677 00:31:57,133 --> 00:32:00,733 but for Adam, the naked approach is all part of his design. 678 00:32:00,800 --> 00:32:05,070 So, we are currently putting on boobs. 679 00:32:05,133 --> 00:32:07,333 So they will be-- 680 00:32:07,400 --> 00:32:09,970 We all have boobs, men and women, 681 00:32:10,033 --> 00:32:12,233 so it's still an androgynous form. 682 00:32:12,300 --> 00:32:16,070 Um, and I think it just makes it a bit playful. 683 00:32:16,133 --> 00:32:18,633 Makes you realise that it's a character a little bit more. 684 00:32:18,700 --> 00:32:21,130 [McSweeney] As Adam adds boobs to his brick, 685 00:32:21,200 --> 00:32:24,700 Alon's opted for something a little less avant-garde. 686 00:32:24,767 --> 00:32:27,327 My grandma is quite superstitious, 687 00:32:27,400 --> 00:32:30,370 and, in Israel, we have these lizards 688 00:32:30,433 --> 00:32:33,173 which are, like, see-through and they eat mosquitoes, 689 00:32:33,233 --> 00:32:34,803 and they're considered good luck, 690 00:32:34,867 --> 00:32:37,367 and anything that kills mosquitoes is pretty good in Israel. 691 00:32:37,433 --> 00:32:40,103 So I thought I'll put some on here. 692 00:32:41,500 --> 00:32:45,530 Potters, you have one hour left. One hour left. 693 00:32:45,600 --> 00:32:49,070 Nothing's dry. Nothing's dry. 694 00:32:49,133 --> 00:32:53,133 Peter, don't be throwing your toys out. You have one hour left. 695 00:32:53,200 --> 00:32:56,430 This is the base of my tagine dish. 696 00:32:56,500 --> 00:32:59,570 More kind of fluid brushstrokes. 697 00:32:59,633 --> 00:33:03,973 You can kind of see maybe like tumbling waves. 698 00:33:04,900 --> 00:33:06,130 [Sal] So this is the orca. 699 00:33:06,200 --> 00:33:08,870 And what have you applied on here? 700 00:33:08,934 --> 00:33:11,504 Manganese. It's still very wet, 701 00:33:11,567 --> 00:33:14,467 so it's hard to get a crisp line. 702 00:33:14,533 --> 00:33:16,273 When are you thinking of cutting it? 703 00:33:16,333 --> 00:33:18,333 I'm not cutting it till the last minute. 704 00:33:18,400 --> 00:33:23,000 Needs to be really firm, or it stands a chance of warping. 705 00:33:23,066 --> 00:33:25,766 All right. I'll leave you to it. 706 00:33:25,834 --> 00:33:27,974 Thanks, Keith. 707 00:33:28,033 --> 00:33:30,203 [McSweeney] Before the chicken brick is finished, 708 00:33:30,266 --> 00:33:32,126 the potters must slice it in two. 709 00:33:32,200 --> 00:33:35,400 And while most are leaving this risky move to the last moment... 710 00:33:35,467 --> 00:33:37,967 -[gasps] -I'm really, really quite stressed. 711 00:33:38,033 --> 00:33:41,403 ...Henry is bravely being the first to make the cut. 712 00:33:41,467 --> 00:33:44,067 So the way I deal with it is I'll just do it, I think. 713 00:33:45,800 --> 00:33:47,300 It's still quite sticky. 714 00:33:48,633 --> 00:33:51,673 Just watching it. Oh, that's a thing of beauty. 715 00:33:51,734 --> 00:33:54,374 -It's going all right? -Uh, maybe. 716 00:33:54,433 --> 00:33:56,673 -Depends if this comes off or not. -Oh. 717 00:34:00,066 --> 00:34:02,726 What are you stuck on? Nothing, that's what you're stuck on. 718 00:34:02,800 --> 00:34:05,570 Hey! That looks really good. 719 00:34:05,633 --> 00:34:10,033 It actually went better than I thought, so, whoo-hoo! Very exciting. 720 00:34:10,100 --> 00:34:12,970 [McSweeney] While Henry starts to add his slip decoration, 721 00:34:13,033 --> 00:34:15,973 the rest of the potters must apply a transparent glaze 722 00:34:16,033 --> 00:34:19,673 to make their tagine and casserole dishes food-safe. 723 00:34:19,734 --> 00:34:22,934 Because these are functional pots, they need to be glazed on the 724 00:34:23,000 --> 00:34:26,800 [Sal] Terracotta is porous, and, uh, if you put a stew in this in the oven, 725 00:34:26,867 --> 00:34:28,697 it will soak through. 726 00:34:28,767 --> 00:34:30,567 [McSweeney] But adding too much glaze and moisture 727 00:34:30,633 --> 00:34:32,373 to the heaviest part of their pots 728 00:34:32,433 --> 00:34:34,373 could lead to cracks as their pieces dry, 729 00:34:34,433 --> 00:34:36,303 even before they're fired. 730 00:34:36,367 --> 00:34:40,297 But I don't want to put too much on all in one go, 731 00:34:40,367 --> 00:34:42,397 as I do feel like I would be prone 732 00:34:42,467 --> 00:34:45,467 to getting it so wet that the base will crack. 733 00:34:45,533 --> 00:34:48,403 It doesn't need to be very dry to do that, does it? 734 00:34:48,467 --> 00:34:51,967 Mm, not really. Hopefully not. 735 00:34:53,066 --> 00:34:56,166 Potters, you have ten minutes left. 736 00:34:56,233 --> 00:34:59,003 Aw, cutting it to the bone again. 737 00:34:59,066 --> 00:35:02,096 [McSweeney] For those potters who have left the cutting of their chicken brick 738 00:35:02,166 --> 00:35:05,596 until it's at its driest, it's time to get the knife out. 739 00:35:05,667 --> 00:35:09,627 So, what are we doing? Um, to cut them-- Yeah, I'm going to cut. 740 00:35:09,700 --> 00:35:12,570 One slip of the knife could ruin the whole brick. 741 00:35:12,633 --> 00:35:14,503 Really don't want to do this. 742 00:35:14,567 --> 00:35:19,097 My incision has just caught at the bum. 743 00:35:19,166 --> 00:35:21,696 -Did you cut it, Jodie? -I'm doing it. 744 00:35:28,467 --> 00:35:31,927 Go on. Push. 745 00:35:32,000 --> 00:35:33,530 [sighs] 746 00:35:33,600 --> 00:35:37,670 Okay, folks, you have one minute remaining. 747 00:35:37,734 --> 00:35:41,434 Oh, do you know what I haven't done? Glazed the inside of my pots. 748 00:35:41,500 --> 00:35:44,500 [McSweeney] Get your stuff into the drying room now. 749 00:35:44,567 --> 00:35:46,327 Well, this has gone well, hasn't it? 750 00:35:46,400 --> 00:35:49,470 Oh, Henry, love, please. Good girl, Jodie. 751 00:35:49,533 --> 00:35:51,573 Look at that mighty barrel. 752 00:35:51,633 --> 00:35:54,073 Excellent. Oh, that looks lovely. 753 00:35:55,333 --> 00:35:57,573 -Well done! Congratulations. -[Adam] Yay! 754 00:36:00,934 --> 00:36:04,104 [McSweeney] The potters' terracotta cookware is now ready for firing 755 00:36:04,166 --> 00:36:06,066 under the supervision of Rose. 756 00:36:07,233 --> 00:36:10,073 [Henry] I forgot that the inside of the tagine 757 00:36:10,133 --> 00:36:12,133 and casserole dish need to be glazed. 758 00:36:12,200 --> 00:36:14,030 With a minute to go. 759 00:36:15,300 --> 00:36:19,700 Arguably the most important part, so... we'll see. 760 00:36:23,633 --> 00:36:26,303 [McSweeney] It's judgement day. 761 00:36:26,367 --> 00:36:30,067 The potters' terracotta cookware has been fired and is ready for judging. 762 00:36:30,133 --> 00:36:32,803 I'm excited to see my set, I really am, 763 00:36:32,867 --> 00:36:35,627 because a lot of effort went into it, you know? 764 00:36:35,700 --> 00:36:39,470 It's quite a sentimental piece to me, so I hope it hasn't broken. 765 00:36:39,533 --> 00:36:42,203 [McSweeney] But the potters won't see their finished pieces 766 00:36:42,266 --> 00:36:45,726 until they are revealed for the very first time in front of the judges. 767 00:36:45,800 --> 00:36:48,730 The lizards, they're considered good luck, so hopefully 768 00:36:48,800 --> 00:36:51,570 they brought some luck to my pots. [chuckles] 769 00:36:54,467 --> 00:36:59,527 Okay, potters, I am sure that you are as excited as us 770 00:36:59,600 --> 00:37:02,100 to see what is underneath the hessian. 771 00:37:02,166 --> 00:37:05,126 So, let's start with Henry. 772 00:37:09,000 --> 00:37:10,270 -Hi, Henry. -Hi. 773 00:37:10,333 --> 00:37:12,503 -How you doing? -Doing all right. 774 00:37:12,567 --> 00:37:14,127 -I'm excited. -[Jones] Shall we have a look? 775 00:37:14,200 --> 00:37:15,500 -Yeah. Let's do it. -Yes. 776 00:37:16,934 --> 00:37:18,934 -Mm. -Ooh. 777 00:37:21,600 --> 00:37:24,070 [Miller] Love the bold gestural drawing. 778 00:37:24,133 --> 00:37:26,773 If you don't get that right, then there's no chance. 779 00:37:26,834 --> 00:37:29,604 -You can't rub it out and start again. -Thank you very much. 780 00:37:29,667 --> 00:37:32,227 Oh, wow. Oh, that's nice. 781 00:37:32,300 --> 00:37:35,400 -Is it? Whoo! -[Jones] That's a really nice surprise. 782 00:37:35,467 --> 00:37:37,827 -That's really nice and light. -Holy moly. 783 00:37:37,900 --> 00:37:40,170 Now, on to the actual tray itself. 784 00:37:40,233 --> 00:37:42,733 Not so good. It ain't fit for purpose. 785 00:37:42,800 --> 00:37:45,000 -Well, no. Definitely not. -[Jones] Let's face it. 786 00:37:45,066 --> 00:37:46,996 So, let's have a look at your casserole. 787 00:37:47,066 --> 00:37:49,266 I'm noticing there aren't any lugs. 788 00:37:49,333 --> 00:37:51,933 I'm looking for somewhere to pick it up, and there's nothing there. 789 00:37:52,000 --> 00:37:55,500 You can pick it up. It's a nice shape, actually, to pick up, I think. 790 00:37:55,567 --> 00:37:57,597 By the time that's full of stew, 791 00:37:57,667 --> 00:37:59,467 that is gonna roast your hands to bits. 792 00:37:59,533 --> 00:38:02,403 -I'm not having that. -[Jones laughs] 793 00:38:02,467 --> 00:38:04,897 -[Miller] Wow, yeah. -[Henry] That's not good, is it? 794 00:38:04,967 --> 00:38:08,227 No. You've applied that glaze on the inside way too thickly. 795 00:38:08,300 --> 00:38:11,130 -I was just so panicked. -[Miller] And as that's just absorbed into the body, 796 00:38:11,200 --> 00:38:13,930 it's just caused it to split apart. 797 00:38:14,000 --> 00:38:16,100 It's a real shame, because if you hadn't rushed that 798 00:38:16,166 --> 00:38:18,226 I really feel confident that would've survived, 799 00:38:18,300 --> 00:38:20,200 because actually it's beautifully even. 800 00:38:20,266 --> 00:38:21,926 -Damn. -[Miller] It just feels really frustrating 801 00:38:22,000 --> 00:38:23,570 'cause it's so close. 802 00:38:23,633 --> 00:38:26,673 [Jones] And the chicken brick: bit on the thick side. 803 00:38:26,734 --> 00:38:29,834 [Miller] You can just see where it's started to split apart, 804 00:38:29,900 --> 00:38:34,070 you know, and that movement in the base has caused the top not to fit. 805 00:38:34,133 --> 00:38:36,103 The bottom has become wider than the top. 806 00:38:36,166 --> 00:38:39,596 But as an overall set and the design concept, it works quite well. 807 00:38:39,667 --> 00:38:42,567 It's very sort of recognisable as a cohesive set. 808 00:38:43,700 --> 00:38:45,130 How you feeling? 809 00:38:45,200 --> 00:38:47,130 -Numb. -[Jones laughs] 810 00:38:47,200 --> 00:38:49,830 -Shall I do the honours? -[Jodie] Yes, please. 811 00:38:49,900 --> 00:38:52,030 -[all] Ooh. -[Jones] Oh, okay. 812 00:38:55,233 --> 00:38:57,803 I like this design. I think it's really, really nice. 813 00:38:57,867 --> 00:39:00,467 -[Miller] So the tagine... -Should we have a look? 814 00:39:00,533 --> 00:39:01,673 [Miller] Yeah. 815 00:39:01,734 --> 00:39:04,134 -Oh, and we've cracked. -Yeah. 816 00:39:04,200 --> 00:39:06,300 -[McSweeney] Oh, good Lord. -[Jones] Oh. Wow. 817 00:39:06,367 --> 00:39:08,327 But the lid, for me, is lovely. 818 00:39:08,400 --> 00:39:11,500 It's a nice, robust weight, and it feels well-thrown. 819 00:39:11,567 --> 00:39:13,627 So let's have a look at the chicken brick. 820 00:39:13,700 --> 00:39:17,170 The size is brilliant. You'd get a decent-sized chicken in there, wouldn't you? 821 00:39:17,233 --> 00:39:19,503 I kind of like it. It's kind of rustic. 822 00:39:19,567 --> 00:39:23,467 It is. No, honestly. Could've been slightly 823 00:39:23,533 --> 00:39:25,273 Really, really not a bad set. Well done. 824 00:39:25,333 --> 00:39:26,673 -Aw, bless you. -Nice work. 825 00:39:26,734 --> 00:39:28,304 [Jodie] Thank you. 826 00:39:28,367 --> 00:39:29,627 [sighs] 827 00:39:29,700 --> 00:39:31,430 -Well, should we have a look? -Yeah. 828 00:39:33,500 --> 00:39:35,030 Whoa. 829 00:39:37,300 --> 00:39:39,900 I love this design. It works really, really well. 830 00:39:39,967 --> 00:39:43,697 It's really playful, even down to the attention to details of the eyebrows. 831 00:39:43,767 --> 00:39:46,297 [Miller] Let's have a look at this casserole. 832 00:39:46,367 --> 00:39:48,527 -We've got an arm that's detached. -[Adam] A broken arm. 833 00:39:48,600 --> 00:39:50,330 [Miller] But let's lift this off. 834 00:39:50,400 --> 00:39:52,300 -[Jones] Oh. -[Adam] Ooh. 835 00:39:52,367 --> 00:39:54,627 [Miller] Another stress crack through the bottom there. 836 00:39:54,700 --> 00:39:56,970 [Jones] So, now we have the chicken brick. 837 00:39:57,033 --> 00:39:59,203 It's slightly on the small side, 838 00:39:59,266 --> 00:40:02,196 um, but you know, again, I just love this. 839 00:40:02,266 --> 00:40:04,966 It is so expressive. It's simplicity at its best. 840 00:40:05,033 --> 00:40:08,403 As a set, I think they work incredibly well. 841 00:40:10,367 --> 00:40:12,467 Okay, let's have a look. 842 00:40:12,533 --> 00:40:13,933 Ooh. 843 00:40:14,000 --> 00:40:15,430 Ooh. 844 00:40:20,133 --> 00:40:22,003 [Jones] Let's have a look at the tagine. 845 00:40:22,066 --> 00:40:24,066 -Oh, my word. -[Jones] Oh, right, okay. 846 00:40:24,133 --> 00:40:26,703 [Miller] Can see you've got a bit of a stress crack in there. 847 00:40:26,767 --> 00:40:30,127 This works really well, these three polar bears here. 848 00:40:30,200 --> 00:40:32,300 It's very simple, but very, very effective. 849 00:40:32,367 --> 00:40:34,897 Let's move on to the chicken brick. 850 00:40:34,967 --> 00:40:37,597 Now, you see, I really love this. 851 00:40:40,567 --> 00:40:43,797 -[both laugh] -It's fantastic. 852 00:40:43,867 --> 00:40:47,567 -Thank you. -You've used the registration mark for his mouth. 853 00:40:47,633 --> 00:40:49,273 There you go, look. 854 00:40:49,333 --> 00:40:51,203 -[high-pitched voice] Hello. -He's eating plankton. 855 00:40:51,266 --> 00:40:53,766 [high-pitched voice] Hello, Keith. I'm cooking you a nice chicken. 856 00:40:53,834 --> 00:40:55,874 [Jones] It's brilliant. It really, really works well. 857 00:40:55,934 --> 00:40:58,504 All completely individual items, but they work together. 858 00:40:58,567 --> 00:41:00,297 -Brilliant. -[Sal] Thank you. 859 00:41:00,367 --> 00:41:02,027 -[Miller] Yeah, fantastic, Sal. -Thank you. 860 00:41:05,400 --> 00:41:07,530 -Well, that is a crack. -[Jones] Wow. 861 00:41:11,834 --> 00:41:14,774 We can't really-- Well, we can comment on whether it's fit for purpose 862 00:41:14,834 --> 00:41:16,404 -because, quite frankly... -[laughter] 863 00:41:16,467 --> 00:41:17,997 -[Jones] It isn't. -Yeah. 864 00:41:18,066 --> 00:41:20,426 -But very successful lid. -Thank you. Yeah. 865 00:41:20,500 --> 00:41:22,100 Let's take a look at the casserole-- 866 00:41:22,166 --> 00:41:24,466 -Oh, wow. -That's fairly conclusive. 867 00:41:24,533 --> 00:41:27,103 -[Jones] That's quite a blow-out, isn't it? -That is a blow-out. 868 00:41:27,166 --> 00:41:29,726 [Jones] I love the lizards. I'm not sure if they work 869 00:41:29,800 --> 00:41:32,070 -as sort of lugs to pick it up with. -[Alon] Yeah. 870 00:41:32,133 --> 00:41:36,733 Out of the set, I mean, this is the sort of only functioning piece, I guess. 871 00:41:36,800 --> 00:41:41,830 But I love this design and the way that draws all of the pieces together. 872 00:41:41,900 --> 00:41:44,300 Yeah, the colour of that slip really, really pops 873 00:41:44,367 --> 00:41:46,327 with the red of the terracotta. 874 00:41:46,400 --> 00:41:48,330 Obviously, this ain't so good. 875 00:41:48,400 --> 00:41:49,470 No. 876 00:41:51,233 --> 00:41:52,603 [inhales sharply] Ooh. 877 00:42:00,200 --> 00:42:04,370 -Oops. -[Miller] It's the symptom of a very heavy lid. 878 00:42:04,433 --> 00:42:06,903 It just puts so much pressure on that bottom 879 00:42:06,967 --> 00:42:08,497 because that clay is having to support 880 00:42:08,567 --> 00:42:10,997 so much weight that it just cracks and moves. 881 00:42:11,066 --> 00:42:14,826 I love these. I absolutely think this is brilliant. 882 00:42:14,900 --> 00:42:18,800 [Miller] Yeah, lovely handles. So, the chicken brick, let's have a look. 883 00:42:18,867 --> 00:42:22,427 Wow. You were talking about the saddle and things like that. 884 00:42:22,500 --> 00:42:24,500 And that's exactly how you pick a saddle up. 885 00:42:24,567 --> 00:42:28,197 You've got a strong theme working its way through. The horseshoes and the riding. 886 00:42:28,266 --> 00:42:31,426 It does sort of bring them together well as a set. 887 00:42:33,800 --> 00:42:34,900 Whoa. 888 00:42:34,967 --> 00:42:36,397 Okay. 889 00:42:39,667 --> 00:42:44,297 This motif you've used as a repeating pattern, it just shouts "tiles," 890 00:42:44,367 --> 00:42:47,067 and you do get that sense of Lisbon or Portugal. 891 00:42:47,133 --> 00:42:49,073 [Jones] Let's have a look at the casserole. 892 00:42:49,133 --> 00:42:50,573 -Oh, dear. -Oh. 893 00:42:50,633 --> 00:42:53,603 [Miller] Oh, we've had a slight issue in there. Yeah. 894 00:42:53,667 --> 00:42:56,827 -[Jones] Right, chicken brick. Let's have a look. -Mm. 895 00:42:58,900 --> 00:43:02,330 [Jones] Okay. Looks like another blow-out there, which is unfortunate. 896 00:43:02,400 --> 00:43:07,230 But, you know, this effect on this particular clay works really, really well. 897 00:43:07,300 --> 00:43:09,900 It's got a rustic Portuguese charm to it. 898 00:43:09,967 --> 00:43:12,727 -[Miller] Beautiful. -Thanks so much. Thank you. 899 00:43:12,800 --> 00:43:15,000 -[Jones] Shall we have a look? -[Miller] Yeah. 900 00:43:15,066 --> 00:43:16,696 [inhales sharply] 901 00:43:21,066 --> 00:43:24,926 [Jones] I would've liked to have seen a more deliberate design application. 902 00:43:25,000 --> 00:43:27,870 It's a bit on the messy side for me. Um... 903 00:43:27,934 --> 00:43:29,934 Obviously, the base of the tagine-- 904 00:43:30,000 --> 00:43:32,300 -[Shenyue] Yeah. -Wow. We've got some real issues there. 905 00:43:32,367 --> 00:43:34,567 -[Shenyue] Serious cracks. -[Miller] Crack, yeah. 906 00:43:34,633 --> 00:43:36,003 -That's one issue. -[Shenyue] Yeah. 907 00:43:36,066 --> 00:43:38,596 And then there's plenty more. 908 00:43:38,667 --> 00:43:41,327 I mean, the walls do look very thin, actually, 909 00:43:41,400 --> 00:43:44,200 by comparison to the thickness of the lid. 910 00:43:44,266 --> 00:43:47,226 Well, let's move on to this. 911 00:43:47,300 --> 00:43:49,570 -Oh. You see-- -[Miller] Don't lift it too... 912 00:43:49,633 --> 00:43:51,873 [laughs] 913 00:43:51,934 --> 00:43:55,704 Yeah, it's the obvious. It's cracked. 914 00:43:55,767 --> 00:43:59,327 -Yeah. -A good set if you're on a diet, I think. 915 00:43:59,400 --> 00:44:03,400 [Shenyue] Keith didn't love the design, and everything was broken, 916 00:44:03,467 --> 00:44:07,267 so, yeah, I'm definitely worried about going home. Yeah. 917 00:44:07,333 --> 00:44:10,673 I didn't actually have a functional piece 918 00:44:10,734 --> 00:44:13,604 in the whole set, so... 919 00:44:13,667 --> 00:44:15,997 [blows raspberry] Pretty bad. 920 00:44:16,066 --> 00:44:21,496 I think I'm going because mine was pretty much the worst blow-out there. 921 00:44:32,500 --> 00:44:36,130 Potters, it's getting harder and harder each week, 922 00:44:36,200 --> 00:44:39,430 but I think we can all say goodbye to terracotta for another year. 923 00:44:39,500 --> 00:44:41,870 -Thank God for that. -[all laugh] 924 00:44:41,934 --> 00:44:45,734 Phew. Now, for the nice bit. 925 00:44:45,800 --> 00:44:49,070 This week's Potter of the Week is... 926 00:44:53,867 --> 00:44:58,967 She took us on a beautiful Canadian adventure. It is Sal. 927 00:44:59,033 --> 00:45:01,533 -[all cheer] -Congratulations, Sal. 928 00:45:04,767 --> 00:45:06,727 Well done. 929 00:45:06,800 --> 00:45:10,500 Now for the bit I really, really, really don't like. 930 00:45:10,567 --> 00:45:13,697 The potter who is leaving us is... 931 00:45:17,867 --> 00:45:19,427 Shenyue. 932 00:45:19,500 --> 00:45:21,130 -[gasps] -Oh, my word. 933 00:45:21,200 --> 00:45:23,430 -Oh, come here to me. -Aw, thank you. 934 00:45:23,500 --> 00:45:27,130 Really, really enjoyed spending time with all the potters, 935 00:45:27,200 --> 00:45:32,000 and, you know, we do have such a clay family now and I'm gonna miss them all dearly. 936 00:45:32,066 --> 00:45:35,326 [Jones] This week, there were a lot of people in the running to go home, 937 00:45:35,400 --> 00:45:37,570 so it came down to design technique, really. 938 00:45:37,633 --> 00:45:40,203 [Shenyue] This has definitely changed my life. 939 00:45:40,266 --> 00:45:42,766 It was just something that I think I needed 940 00:45:42,834 --> 00:45:46,204 to push me to try different things and challenge me. 941 00:45:46,266 --> 00:45:49,326 I'm just... Yeah, just going to keep pottering on. 942 00:45:51,533 --> 00:45:54,733 [McSweeney] As Shenyue says goodbye to the pottery, 943 00:45:54,800 --> 00:45:58,600 Sal's terracotta cookware is her second set 944 00:45:58,667 --> 00:46:01,227 to be placed in the Throw Down gallery. 945 00:46:01,300 --> 00:46:04,770 Potter of the Week again. Hey, that's-- I'm stunned. 946 00:46:04,834 --> 00:46:06,604 Over the moon. This week's done. 947 00:46:06,667 --> 00:46:09,697 Next week's a new start, a new challenge, 948 00:46:09,767 --> 00:46:12,467 and you've got to hit it at 100 miles an hour. 949 00:46:12,533 --> 00:46:14,933 -[McSweeney] Next time... -[Sal] Sorry. 950 00:46:15,000 --> 00:46:19,570 -...the biggest build so far. -One, two, three, over. Quickly. Whoa. 951 00:46:19,633 --> 00:46:22,733 -Animal water features. -[sighs] It's breaking the thing. 952 00:46:22,800 --> 00:46:25,070 -But who will be in floods... -Hey. Whoa. 953 00:46:25,133 --> 00:46:28,173 ...and who will survive to make it to the quarter-final? 954 00:46:28,233 --> 00:46:30,033 -[crash] -[Jodie] Oops. 955 00:46:30,100 --> 00:46:32,230 I thought you were mad. Completely mad. 956 00:46:32,300 --> 00:46:33,670 [McSweeney] Maybe we could turn it off now?77179

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.