e $ 99 1A $ ‘Frenetic holiday season keeps potter busy By DIANE HART Special to the Beaver Take one ambitious potter, a masâ€" io d J. LOCKWOOD PLYMOUTH CHRYSLER LTD Invest some time to find out December 12th in Oakville. 1994 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER . NO HASSLE PRICE Completely power equipped, 3.5L tÂ¥ V6, 4 speed, automatic, ABS, autoâ€" $ matic air, and much more. Stk. #P2424 , "Based on a 48 month lease, $4,000 down or equivalent trade, first payment and security deposit required. Plus license taxes. 0.A.C. **Subject to prior sale, license taxes extra. Balanced of factory warranty available. Please register by calling Light Refreshments (905) 847â€"7776 Murtha Find out by joining our series of Seminars covering basic and advanced financial planning strategies. do for you? Are You Making The Right FINANCIAL MOVES? BETWEEN KERR DORVAL NEXT SEMINAR THURSDAY, December 8, 1994 1:30 â€" 3:00 pm Burlington Conference _ Centre (Reimer Tower) 5420 North Service Rd. (Burloak Q.E.W.) PROGRAM: sive gas kiln, a steady stream of tourists on the wild, windswept north coast of Scotland, and it‘s a paradise come true. Capital Gains Exemption RIF‘s vs Annuities Guest Speaker, Stan Spencer, CA Mintz Partners At least, that‘s what Clive Tucker claims it was when he worked as an apprentice potter for a few months last year with potter Lotte Glob. "The sea was clear; the beaches were empty. It was beautiful there," says the 31â€"yearâ€"old potter, now busiâ€" ly immersed in making the candleâ€" sticks, plates, teapots, garlic pots, mugs, and other craft necessities for the upcoming craft. show at Glenburnie School on Dec. 3rd. Amid the sheep, the heather, and the blissful quiet of a village of 320 people, Tucker learned all about the process of being a good potter â€" from "throwing a few mugs" to proper glazing. "It is so full of the joy of life, which is what you can really discover in the north of Scotland," he adds. Following his fourâ€"month apprenâ€" ticeship with Danish potter Lotte, he returned to begin working as a potter and working out of the quarters of the Oakville Art Society, where he has a few pieces for sale in the OAS shop. He also has work in the Burlington Art Connection and True Places in Mississauca. Back in the small kiln shop housed in the Oakville Arts Society where Tucker is preparing the hunâ€" dreds of works for sale â€" dust flies, heat rises from the kiln, and he curses as the top of a casserole dish doesn‘t fit so tightly as it should. But despite the somewhat inseâ€" cure life of a potter, Tucker seems nonplused by it all. "It happens and it means working a little harder, that‘s all," he shrugs. The attraction to pottery, for the native Yorkshire man, is its form. The fact you can sit at the wheel and make any shape at all is why it is so appealing, he says. He has been working as a potter for the past two years and lives in Oakville with his wife, Susan â€" a professor of health sciences at McMaster University; and son Investors Group Oakville potter Clive Tucker is just one of the many craftspeople who will be setting up shop at the Glenburnie Craft Sale tomorrow, 10 a.m. to 3 p. m. at the Upper Middle Road School. (Photo by Riziero Vertolli) Aidan, who is enrolled at Glenburnie School. He says the attraction to the potâ€" tery he makes â€" particularly, the new design of woods in blue/green hues on plates and bowls â€" is the attractive design coupled with the functional quality. «"Most of it is pretty functional and people can use it all the time. It just doesn‘t sit there to look good â€" you can use it in the oven, the microwave...it works," he explains. Leaning over the kiln to peer at the work sitting cooling at the botâ€" tom, he says what he would really For more information on lung disease. or to make a donation, call 847â€"1033 iss when You Can‘t Breathe, N . .. e Nothing Else Matters. Support The Lung Association‘s Christmas Seal Campaign THE Z2 LUNG ASSOCIATION The Christmas Seal People like is a studio of his own But for now, the frenetic holiday season is enough to keep him potting about in the tiny room at the back of the OAS quarters. On one day last week, he glazed all night just to get everything ready for one of the shows his work is in. "I was pretty tired, but at least, all the work was done," he says. Once again, to a potter, you‘re only as good as your next craft show. And at this time of year, there‘s no end of them." "It‘s difficult just keeping up with them. But it‘s always a chance to sell, so I just keep working."