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Student Registration for Clay Modeling and Pottery Training

Use this page to register interest in upcoming online lessons or in-person workshop sessions. The form is intentionally simple: name and email only. After you send it, we will reply with format options, an outline of the next module start, and what to prepare for the first practice session.

What you receive after registering

We send a practical reply with the next start date, lesson rhythm, and the recommended clay body and tool list. If you plan to attend in person, we also include studio handling notes such as wedging setup, work-surface protection, and safe cleanup to reduce dust.

The goal is clarity. A short checklist helps students begin with consistent habits: moisture control, wall thickness targets, and join preparation using scoring and slip. These details prevent common issues like seam splitting and rim warping.

How registration helps planning

Registration allows relatrakvo to balance groups and prepare the right mix of demonstrations and projects. Beginners typically start with pinch, coil, and slab construction, while intermediate learners spend more time on proportion, controlled hollowing, and surface finishing.

If you later choose online-only or a mixed format, that is fine. We treat registration as a planning signal, not a commitment to a fixed schedule.

Student registration form

Provide your name and email to register interest. We will use your details to respond with course options and scheduling information. Typical response time is within 1 business day. We do not sell your data.

Registration support email

[email protected]

Studio address

Draguš 93, 439 42 Postoloprty, Czechia

Educational disclaimer

This website provides educational content and training services related to clay modeling and pottery. Results depend on individual practice and dedication.

By submitting, you agree to our Privacy Policy.

Before you start: a simple first-week plan

The first week is about repeatable fundamentals. Students begin with wedging to align the clay body and remove air pockets, then make two small test forms to check plasticity and moisture. This is where most early issues show up: overly wet clay that slumps, or overly dry clay that tears at the rim.

Handbuilding focuses on a small set of moves: compression passes, even wall thickness, and clean joins using a scoring pattern and slip. Sculpting modules add block-in and proportion checks, then refine the silhouette with controlled trimming and smoothing. Drying strategy matters from day one: cover pieces loosely, rotate them, and avoid heat sources that pull moisture too fast.

This approach is methodical on purpose. It gives students a baseline, so later creative projects have a stable technical foundation.

Data and privacy in plain language

The registration form collects your name and email so we can reply with scheduling information and course next steps. We do not request payment details, identification documents, or sensitive personal information as part of registration.

Cookies are used for site functionality and, if you choose, analytics and marketing measurement. You can manage preferences at any time using the “Manage cookie preferences” link in the footer. Details are available in the Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy.

If you want your data removed, email [email protected] and include “Data Deletion Request” in the subject line.

Ready to register and get the next module dates?

Send the registration form and we will reply with format options and a practical preparation checklist for the first session.

Disclaimer

This website provides educational content and training services related to clay modeling and pottery. Results depend on individual practice and dedication.