Veebs
Mame
I can’t find any books from experts on the topic. What other resources are there, if I don’t have someone nearby that I can learn from directly.
Great question.Making pots? Or pot usage with bonsai trees?
I beg to differ, because I like cheap and functional. To me, that's direct competition.They can't compete with handmade Japanese pots but they were cheap but mine.
In contrast to books about bonsai there are only very few books about the subject of bonsai pots.
Books concerning the artistic aspect of bonsai pots exist only since the early 70s of the last century.
Therefore this subject has been dealt with in literature only for a rather short time and not very elaborately.
For those of you who love bonsai pots you quickly realize that there are very few publications in the U.S. that can provide you with a good reference on high quality Japanese or Chinese pots.
I want to educate myself more to become a retailer of American and Japanese handmade pots.Making pots? Or pot usage with bonsai trees?
I am a DIY guy, with pots, plants, and a life of 70 years of experience. I don't need someone else's stuff to make me happy. I would also say that all my plants are mine but, a 93 yr old friend recently gifted me a dozen or so trees just before he passed. I will never claim them as mine. (Even my wife calls them Barrie's trees.)I beg to differ, because I like cheap and functional. To me, that's direct competition.
I suck at judging pottery, so anything that isn't ugly and is functional and frost proof, is a good pot to me. That means that the dollar store two blocks away is competing with my pottery supplier in Germany, and the pottery club my friend goes to is getting more money from me than any Japanese potter ever will. Don't underestimate yourself, that's what I'm saying.
We have this saying "Something is worth as much as a fool is willing to pay for it". I'm a fool, no question about that, but I'm not paying more than 50 dollars for a pot.