Always a hit with students, this project starts with handbuilding a couple of pinch pots and finishes with an amazing musical instrument that looks great too!
In general I do a "clay test" before we work with clay. I demonstrate scoring and slipping and then the students are given a small amount of clay and they need to demonstrate they can use S&S to keep 2 pieces of clay together. they form a handle and base, connect them, then I test its strength. If it passes, they can use clay to make their project.
For years I have been using these directions to teach students how to make whistles: The link includes great illustrations.
How to Make a Clay Whistle
1.
Make two pinch pots and join them together to make a
ball or egg shape. Try to make the pinch pots a uniform thickness of about ¼
inch throughout. Try not to let a ridge or indentation form along where the two
pinch pots join.
2.
Make a sort of wedge-shaped piece of clay to join as
the mouthpiece. Join it as shown in Illustration 2. After it is joined, you may
have to gently pat it against a flat surface to ensure that the to pieces are
flat across the top as shown in illustration 2.
3.
Just
gently tap the whistle on a flat surface in order to achieve a nice flat
surface for your airflow [Illustration 3]. Once you have the shape right, it is
time to create the mouthpiece and the hole in such a way that it really makes a
whistling sound. This is a very sensitive part of making the whistle, so follow
along carefully.
4. Turn
the whistle over so that you can look at the “top”. In these next steps, you
will make a narrow passage for air to flow through and you will make a hole in
the top. These must be done in a very precise manner. Look at Illustration 4 to
see how the air should flow through the whistle.
5. Study
Illustration 5 carefully. Use a narrow flat stick (I carve one from a balsa
wood stick.) to gently push a passage through the mouthpiece. This is what it
would look like if it were cut in half right down the middle.
6. Leaving
the stick in the mouthpiece, hold your whistle so that you are looking down on
it. You will need to get the placement of the hole in the top just right. Take
a look at Illustration 6. This is where the hole should be placed. Be sure to
notice the thickness of the clay and that the front of the hole should line up
with the front, inside edge of the globe shaped whistle body.
7.
After you have cut a small rectangular hole in the top
you can gently pull out the stick. You will use it again in a minute.
8.
Using a rounded tool like a round pencil or thin
marker, vertically lower it into the inside of your whistle through the hole in
the top and gently roll it back and forth to flatten the front of the inner
hollow as shown below in Illustration 7. [The places indicating the holes are
gray.]
9.
Insert the flattened stick back into the air passage
hole. This helps to clear out the clay that clogs it back up while flattening
the front. Now, you will see why it is important that you use a flat stick to
make this hole. Keeping the stick inserted all of the way into the whistle as
shown below, try to gently brace it steady while using the rounded stick to
form a wedge on the other edge of the hole. See Illustration 8.
10. The
placement of the holes and the wedge are vital. You may have to go back and
forth between steps 8 and 9 until you get a whistle sound. [By the way, you
want to either wrap a piece of paper around the mouthpiece or wrap your fingers
around it to blow through. Don’t get the clay on your mouth.]
11. Once
you have achieved a whistle that makes a sound, stop, wrap it loosely in
plastic and put it away until the next day. If you continue to blow into it,
the moisture from your breath will cause it to cave in. Don’t forget to incise
your initials into it if you are working with a group. You do want to know
which one is yours.