When we hear the phrase “throwing pottery,” we imagine hands steady on wet clay, a wheel spinning, pressure shaping something useful from something soft. The process is rhythmic, almost meditative. The potter does not force the clay. The form emerges through patience, pressure, and careful guidance.
In this project, fabric and clothesline take the place of clay. Instead of a wheel, a sewing machine hums steadily as coils are guided into shape. The motion is different, the medium is different, but the principle is the same: something ordinary is shaped into something purposeful through attention and intention.
There is something quietly beautiful in that idea. Sometimes God molds us through the expected tools — prayer, Scripture, sacrament. Other times, He uses a different medium altogether. A season of waiting. A creative project. A change of pace. The shaping still happens, even when the method surprises us.
This fabric bowl is a small reminder that forming and being formed often look different than we imagine.


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