Every package below ships its own matching clay kit
Group sizes stay between four and seven people across all formats. Prices below are indicative starting points and can vary by session length and kit contents.
Discovery Session
from €89
A single live class covering either wheel basics or hand-building basics, aimed at people deciding which direction to explore further. Includes a starter kit sized for one or two small pieces.
- Group of up to 6
- One clay kit, your choice of format
- Return shipping for one piece
Wheel Fundamentals
from €259
Four consecutive weekly sessions covering centering, pulling even walls, shaping, and trimming. The kit includes enough clay to throw multiple attempts each week, since early centering rarely goes right the first time.
- Group of up to 5
- Worktop wheel included in kit
- Firing and glazing for up to 3 pieces
Hand-Building Intensive
from €239
Coil, slab, and pinch construction across four sessions, aimed at people more interested in sculptural or asymmetric forms than symmetrical wheel work. No wheel required for this kit.
- Group of up to 7
- Texture tools and slab rollers included
- Firing and glazing for up to 4 pieces
Studio Membership
from €149 / month
For people who finished a series and want continued small-group time. Monthly themes rotate between glazing techniques, surface decoration, and more advanced throwing exercises.
- Group of up to 6, same cohort monthly
- Refill clay kit shipped each month
- Discounted return shipping for extra pieces
What a wheel session actually looks like on screen
The instructor throws alongside the group in real time, pausing often. Camera angles are arranged so hand position on the wheel is visible, which is usually the detail that matters most for centering clay correctly.
Sessions run just under two hours including setup and cleanup time, since a wet worktop wheel needs a few extra minutes on both ends.
No wheel, more room for irregular shapes
Hand-building sessions move at a different rhythm than wheel classes. There's more waiting for clay to firm up between steps, which the instructor fills with technique discussion or answering questions from earlier in the series.
Groups in this format tend to run slightly larger, since the safety and pacing concerns of a spinning wheel aren't part of the picture.
A look at how a live session is arranged