Install
openclaw skills install handbuilt-pottery-pit-firing-basicsUse when you need durable, repairable kitchenware, storage jars, tools, or ritual objects made from local clay without electricity, kilns, or commercial supply chains. Agent researches your local clay sources and soil types, generates customized project plans with material lists and firing schedules, tracks drying/firing logs via filesystem, sets automated reminders for each stage, and drafts troubleshooting decision trees; human performs all physical work — digging and processing clay, handbuilding, and pit firing.
openclaw skills install handbuilt-pottery-pit-firing-basicsCreate functional, zero-waste pottery using only local clay, handbuilding techniques, and traditional pit firing — no wheels or electric kilns required. This protocol turns raw earth into waterproof bowls, storage jars, cups, and tools that survive real-world use in unstable times.
npx clawhub install handbuilt-pottery-pit-firing-basics
In a post-AI world where supply chains fracture and humans reclaim physical craft, handbuilt pottery with pit firing is one of the highest-leverage self-reliance skills: you produce your own tableware, food storage, and trade goods from the ground beneath your feet. The agent becomes your project architect and record-keeper; you stay in the clay, shaping and firing with your hands.
Agent Handles (all bureaucracy and logic):
Human Handles (all physical and embodied work):
Agent asks for: your location/climate zone, available outdoor space, preferred final pieces (bowls, jars, plates), and any existing burn materials.
Agent runs the jar test protocol and tells you exactly how to process your local clay (how much grog to add, settling times).
Decision tree output by agent:
Agent supplies three ready-to-use templates scaled to your needs:
Human builds 6–12 pieces per batch. Agent reminds you of wall thickness targets (¼–⅜ inch) and drying stages:
Agent generates drying log template and pings you daily until bone-dry.
Agent designs your pit:
Human digs/prepares pit and places ware on a bed of sand and sawdust. Agent outputs exact loading diagram and burn-material layering sequence.
Agent provides timed checklist:
Human tends fire, rotates pieces if needed, and makes real-time tactile decisions (agent gives “if smoke turns black → add more air” rules).
Agent logs temperature estimates from color and smoke and stores for next batch optimization.
Human unloads cooled ware. Agent generates:
Project Inventory Tracker (filesystem Markdown table agent updates):
Batch ID | Piece Type | Quantity | Clay Source | Fired Date | Status | Notes
POT-2026-04-01 | Coil Jar | 4 | Backyard | 2026-04-15 | Tested watertight | Ready for glaze test
Firing Log Template (agent populates after each run):
Safety & Materials Checklist (agent exports to you before every phase)
Email/Neighbor Trade Script (agent customizes): “Hi [Neighbor], I just pit-fired a fresh batch of handbuilt clay jars. Would you trade 2 jars for a bag of your applewood chips for next firing?”
Crack During Drying?
Ware Not Watertight After Firing?
Smoke Firing Color Not Dark Enough?
Agent reviews your logs every 90 days and proposes:
This skill provides professional-grade, evidence-based protocols drawn from traditional pit-firing methods (documented in archaeological records and texts such as Primitive Pottery techniques and John Seymour’s The Self-Sufficient Life) and modern adaptations. It is for educational and personal use only. Local fire regulations, soil testing for heavy metals, and food-safety guidelines vary by jurisdiction — verify compliance. The agent and skill authors assume no liability for injury, property damage, or food-borne illness. Start small, stay safe, and keep your hands in the clay.