I should have attended NVBS last month haha. It looks like he was doing a workshop on it.Simple break might be a tight fix with some epoxy. David @lieuz might be able to offer some advice. He's a great resource on kintsugi and does fantastic work.
Repaired pots may or may not be useable depending on the fix.
Thats what Im leaning toward. While I appreciate the effort and knowledge involved in traditional kintsugi, I've worked with 2 part epoxy enough to trust its mechanical strength when prepared properly. And it's quick.I think this is a nice candidate to repair with some epoxy if you don't have any experience with (real) kintsugi.
About a year ago I repaired my first partly broken pot with some epoxy (click).
The pot was missing a piece out of the rim of the pot but there were no cracks what so ever.
After this first repair I got convidence enough to try it again on more difficult repairs when the time comes.
Have fun repairing the Yamaaki pot!
Yep! Clean two piece break (other than some dust).You’re lucky in the sense it looks like a clean two piece break. UPS hand me a Ron Lang pot in a crushed box that sounds like broken glassit was smashed into five or six larger pieces and dozens of smaller pieces and some dust
I epoxied back together and might use it as a training pot but structurally it’s. It’s not trustworthy
It’s too bad people don’t package pots betterYou’re lucky in the sense it looks like a clean two piece break. UPS hand me a Ron Lang pot in a crushed box that sounds like broken glassit was smashed into five or six larger pieces and dozens of smaller pieces and some dust
I epoxied back together and might use it as a training pot but structurally it’s. It’s not trustworthy
Wasn't the potter's fault. I've ordered many pots from Ron over the years. Packaged very well. From the breakage pattern, it appears to have been smashed by something either dropped from a distance or applied with extreme force. The impact area on the pot was turned to dust. The force required to break the pot through six layers of bubble wrap, five inches of plastic peanuts, an interior box with peanuts--was considerable. Point is breaks happen.It’s too bad people don’t package pots better
Fwiw I don’t think most damage is done by drivers. It’s done in processing centers where there are lots of heavy moving parts. Drivers may break pots throwing them on porches etc but forklifts conveyor belts packing into large cargo containers etc has more weight and inertia going onThere needs to be some accountability for the drivers. When I worked for a Budweiser distributor, the stores only paid for the cases delivered intact, so we had to be very careful with the glass bottles, protected only by a thin layer of corrugated board. I don't understand why UPS and FedEx drivers can't follow the same rules.