Published 2017
The Qvevri-Maker’s Tale: “To make a qvevri, you start at the pointed bottom,” says Zaliko Bozhadze, one of Georgia’s most famous and acclaimed master potters. “That’s the only part that’s done on a potter’s wheel. Then you work up from there, a little clay at a time, adding about 15 to 20 centimetres per day in the summer when it’s hot, but only 20 centimetres every three days when the weather is cool or rainy.” A qvevri is, in effect, a giant coil pot and the potter learns by experience how much he can add in a day and still maintain the strength and tension needed to hold the shape and weight of the clay that is to come. After all, the qvevri walls are only about
Advertisement
Advertisement