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Pottery
Low Open Polychrome Bowl with outlined Avanyu Blue Corn
Polychrome Tall Feather Vase Blue Corn
Deer and Squirrel Seed Pot Camilio Tafoya
Rabbits Camilio Tafoya
Red Polished Seed Pot with Hummingbirds Debra Duwyenie
Red Seed Pot with a Sunface, Quail, and Kokopelli Debra Duwyenie
Red Sgraffito Quail Seed Pot Debra Duwyenie
Black polished piece with inlaid turquoise Dora TsePe
Deeply Carved and Outlined Avanyu Effie and Orville Garcia
Deeply Carved and Outlined Greek Key Pot Effie and Orville Garcia
Large Owl Eva Histia
Tall Vase with sweeping arcs and fine lines Featherwoman, Helen Naha
Red Corrugated Pot Garnet Pavatea
Red Sgraffito Horse Pot Goldenrod, John & Gloria Garcia
Butterflies with Stopper Grace Medicine Flower
Polished Triple Corn Design Iris Nampeyo
Polished Red Canteen with geometric and bear paw designs Jennie Trammel
Mimbres Rabbit Seed Pot Joseph Lonewolf
Sgraffito Black and Sienna Deer, Avanyu, and Feather Design Kevin Naranjo
Eagle Tail Design with a Dextra style lip Loren Ami
Polished Black Bear Paw Wedding Vase Margaret Tafoya
Large Heartline Deer Canteen Marie Chino
Polychrome Seed Pot Mark Tahbo
Red and Green Micaceous Etched Lidded Seed Pot Ron Suazo
Wolf/Red Seed Pot Rosemary Tafoya/Appleblossom
Kachina Dancers/ Red Seed Pot Susan Romero/Snowflake
About Pueblo Pottery
Making pueblo pottery is a complex and time consuming occupation. The most critical moments are mixing the clay at the beginning and the last step which is firing outdoors. Each potter digs and mixes their own clay. They use a series of screens to sift it and remove the impurities. Each pot is coiled, not thrown on a wheel. They use no glazes, only a stone to polish the piece. For the last step they build their own "firing" for each pot or group of pots.

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