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Building a Slow Potter's Wheel — Tournette for Coil-Built Pottery
Clay

Created by

Clay

23. March 2026

Building a Slow Potter's Wheel — Tournette for Coil-Built Pottery

Build a slow potter's wheel (tournette) — a hand-turned turntable that allows a potter to rotate a vessel while building and shaping it. The tournette appeared in Mesopotamia by approximately 4500 BCE and represents an intermediate technology between fully hand-built pottery and the later fast-spinning kick wheel. It greatly improves the symmetry and uniformity of coil-built vessels.

Intermediate
3-5 hours

Instructions

1

Shape the Turntable Disc

Select a flat stone (limestone, sandstone, or basalt) or a thick wooden disc approximately 30-40 cm in diameter and 3-5 cm thick. If using stone, shape it into a roughly circular disc by pecking the edges with a hammerstone, then grind the surfaces flat on a large sandstone slab. The top surface (where the pot sits) should be reasonably flat and level. Drill or peck a socket hole in the exact centre of the underside, about 2-3 cm diameter and 2-3 cm deep. This socket receives the pivot peg. If using wood, select a cross-section cut from a large, straight-grained hardwood trunk and bore the centre socket with a bow drill.

2

Prepare the Base and Pivot

Select a heavy, stable stone for the base — it must be flat enough to sit firmly on the ground and heavy enough that it does not move when the turntable is spun. Drill or peck a shallow socket (2-3 cm deep) in the centre of the base stone. Shape a hardwood dowel or stone peg to serve as the pivot axle — approximately 10-15 cm long, fitting snugly into the base socket. The top of the pivot peg fits into the socket in the turntable disc. The turntable should spin freely on the pivot with minimal wobble. Apply animal fat as a lubricant to the pivot to reduce friction.

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Assemble and Balance

Insert the pivot peg into the base socket. Place the turntable disc on top with its socket engaging the pivot peg. The turntable should rotate freely with a gentle push and spin for several seconds on its momentum. If it wobbles, the surfaces are not flat enough — re-grind the base or turntable until the disc spins evenly. If it stops too quickly, the pivot is too tight or needs more lubrication. A well-made tournette spins freely enough to complete several full rotations from a single push, giving the potter enough momentum to smooth and shape the vessel while it turns.

4

Use the Tournette for Pottery

The tournette is turned by hand — the potter pushes the edge of the disc to rotate it while building a pot using the coil method. Roll clay into long ropes and stack them in a spiral on the rotating disc. As the disc turns, smooth the coils together with a wet hand, bone tool, or pottery rib. The continuous rotation ensures even wall thickness and a more symmetrical profile than is achievable by hand alone. The tournette does not spin fast enough for true throwing (shaping from a lump using centrifugal force) — that requires the later innovation of the fast wheel. However, it dramatically improves the uniformity and aesthetic quality of coil-built pottery.

5

Evolution and Significance

The slow wheel evolved into the fast wheel (true potter's wheel) by approximately 3500-3000 BCE in Mesopotamia through the addition of a heavy flywheel — a massive stone disc at the base that stores rotational energy and maintains speed. The fast wheel allowed true throwing, revolutionising pottery production speed and uniformity. However, the slow tournette continued in use alongside fast wheels for centuries, particularly for large vessels that were too heavy to throw. Both technologies coexisted at many ancient sites. The tournette principle — a low-friction turntable for symmetrical work — is one of the most fundamental mechanical innovations in human history and directly influenced the later development of the wheel for transport.

Step 5 - Image 1

Materials

  • Flat stone disc or wooden disc (turntable) - 1 disc, 30-40 cm diameter, 3-5 cm thick piecePlaceholder
    Zobacz
  • Hardwood dowel or stone peg (pivot axle) - 1 piece, 10-15 cm long piecePlaceholder
    Zobacz
  • Stone with socket hole (base) - 1 heavy, flat stone piecePlaceholder
    Zobacz
  • Animal fat (lubricant) - small amount piecePlaceholder
    Zobacz

Wymagane narzędzia

  • Hammerstone (for pecking stone)Placeholder
    Zobacz
  • Flint drill or bow drill
  • Sandstone abraderPlaceholder
    Zobacz

CC0 Public Domain

Ten plan jest udostępniany na licencji CC0. Możesz go swobodnie kopiować, modyfikować, rozpowszechniać i wykorzystywać do dowolnych celów, bez konieczności uzyskiwania zgody.

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