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2002 Display
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Canyon
Creek Pottery opens in Sisters
Canyon Creek
Pottery, located at 310 Cedar Street, is now open for business.
The quaint pottery shop, owned
by Ken Merrill, is tucked just two blocks behind the middle school, at
the corner of Cedar and Adams streets.
Merrill has lived in Sisters
for the past four years. He moved here from Ennis, Montana, where Ken
said, "I owned and operated a pottery business just like this one....and
fished a lot!"
Merrill said that friends
and warmer winters brought him from Montana to Sisters.
"In Montana I lived in a real
windy spot, and when it got cold, it was miserable!" he said.
Opening his business in Sisters
posed a bit of a problem for Merrill, since he wanted the business to
be based out of his home.
According to Merrill the area
where he lives was recently rezoned as commercial, but is still a residential
neighborhood.
"The old residential ordinance
didn't allow any retail sales for in-home businesses," he said.
Merrill met with City Planner
Neil Thompson and was told that in order to open for business he would
have to change his property completely over to commercial, which would
include putting in sidewalks, a drain field, and paved parking.
Merrill wanted to keep his
property residential looking.
"If I had to adhere to all
the commercial requirements it would have been a real shock to the neighborhood,"
he said. "It also wouldn't have been feasible for me investment-wise,
since we're not located in the center of town and really don't get any
foot traffic."
Merrill said that, "After
talking with the city planner it was suggested I talk to the planning
commission about changing the existing in-home business ordinance. After
looking into the situation the planning commission developed a transitional
ordinance which allowed me to open a business based out of my home."
Canyon Creek Pottery is open
seven days a week from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The shop carries a very wide
variety of handmade functional pottery, which includes mugs, bowls and
pie plates.
There are also lamps, vases,
fountains and some light fixtures. A sample of Merrill's light fixtures
is on display at Angeline's Bakery and Cafe.
Most of Merrill's merchandise
is "high fire" stoneware. Merrill also does some "raku," which is a Japanese
firing technique. Raku is a more decorative glaze, rather than a functional
one, and is used more on vases and lamps.
Merrill does the majority
of the work himself. The pottery making process starts with Merrill making
his own clay.
Georgies, a supplier out of
Portland, mixes up a "dry" recipe specifically for Canyon Creek Pottery.
Merrill adds water to the dry ingredients and puts them in a clay mixer,
and then runs it through a pug mill.
This makes the clay ready
to be thrown on the wheel.
Merrill hand-throws each piece
on a potter's wheel and then lets it sit overnight, ready to be trimmed
the following day.
Next, the pieces are bisque
fired to 1,800 degrees in an electric kiln. Finally, the pieces are glazed
and loaded into a glaze kiln where they are fired 12 hours to 2,400 degrees.
It takes Merrill about two weeks to make enough pieces to fill the kiln.
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