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Potter Meghan McCrone pours passion into her work

Artist talks about her relationship with her craft
Meghan McCrone
Meghan McCrone works on a bowl in her backyard studio in Brackendale.

Making a cup or bowl or kettle is a journey, potter Meghan McCrone says, as she pours a cup of steaming tea in her natural-light soaked studio. 

It starts with an idea. Then there’s the many steps to reaching that goal: preparing the clay, crafting the item, letting it dry, touching it up, firing it, glazing it – and the process can keep going, McCrone says as she walks over to four bowls she has been crafting.

“You need patience, timing, balance and flexibility,” she adds. “And you never know how the final product will turn out.” 

There’s a calmness to the Ƶappmother of two’s voice, a kind of ease that may only come from years of opening up the kiln to find a cracked mug or cup, when hours of work crumble before one’s eyes. Her studio, a sanctuary away from her two- and seven-year-old, is a palette of earthy tones, sprinkled with a wall of colourful pictures that inspire her. It’s tucked away in the corner of her backyard, a stone’s throw from her husband’s workshop in the other nook of the garden. 

Parisian accordion music plays from a small speaker in the studio as McCrone continues to explain her love of pottery and the sometimes tumultuous relationship that comes with it. 

“I feel like they are my foster child,” McCrone says light-heartedly. “I make them and then send them out into the community.”

McCrone’s love of clay started when she was 14 years old. At the time, she was chosen to participate in a high school ceramic workshop with artist Joe Farard. She later attended what was then Capilano College and UBC’s fine arts program before transferring to Emily Carr University of Art and Design to better focus on arts, McCrone says. In return, she promised her parents she would also complete a teaching degree, a promise she kept. She now works at Cedar Valley Waldorf School.

Under the name of Muddy Marvels Pottery, McCrone crafts items to sell at artisan markets and at shops around town. In her studio, she also hosts pottery workshops that have become so popular she’s added extra weeks. In a world that is obsessed with perfection, people seem to be seeking solace in uniqueness, McCrone says, noting pottery has once again become the in thing. 

McCrone gets joy out of providing moments of “uniqueness,” whether it’s five minutes in the morning sipping on coffee from a hefty mug or feeling the ripples from fingers spun into a salad bowl. The handmade pottery offers little escapes from the IKEA-ness of our landscape, she says. 

“These pieces become old friends,” McCrone says, “friends you catch up with briefly throughout the day.”

For more on McCrone’s pottery and her workshops visit www.muddymarvelspottery.com.

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