A tripod stilt found at the site of
Linthorpe Art PotteryTripod pernette (an archaeological find). Placed into a kiln upside down with respect to the drawingPernettes stuck in the walls of the
saggars to separate flat pieces
Stilts are small supports used when firing glazed
ceramics to stop the melting
glaze from fusing them to each other or the kiln.[1][2][3] Stilts are a form of
kiln furniture.[4] Their presence in archaeological sites, where they may be known as pernette, along with other kiln furniture such as
saggars and
kiln bars can be used to support a case for local production.[4] Some potters avoid the need for stilts by not glazing the bottom of their products.[5] This is known as dry footing.[5]
History
Various types of stilts have been developed over the centuries:
Tripod stilt
The tripod stilt, which has three legs with a raised point on each end, appears to have been developed in China at least as far back as the third century AD.[2][6] Tripod stilts have been found during excavations in
Ur.[7]
It was adopted by the Islamic world in the 9th century AD and was later adopted by the Byzantines around the start of the 13th century.[2] The use of this stilt can be deduced from damage to the glaze where the three raised points were in direct contact with it.[2] A similar type of stilt appears to have been used in the Staffordshire area and perhaps Scotland between the 1760s and 1850s.[8]
Ring stilt
A slightly damaged ring stilt
Ring stilts, which consist of a ring with three raised points of clay placed at equal distances around the rim, were in use in the second half of the 18th century.[8]
Crown stilt
Crown stilts were in use during much the same time period as ring stilts.[8]
A stilt has been found at a Roman kiln site near
Holt, Wrexham County Borough dating to around the first or second century AD.[9] It was designed to be used within a
saggar and has clay pads supporting it within the saggar.[9]
Archaeology
In archaeology, they may be upside-down baked clay tripods, leaving characteristic marks at the bottoms of the pottery/porcelain.[10][11] They expose the bottom of the fired piece to the full heat[12] and prevent the pieces from sticking to each other.
Manufacture
In the 19th century centralised industrial production of molded three-arm stilts began common in the UK with Staffordshire exporting them to other parts of the country.[13] Some of the manufactures appear to have used distinctive mold designs.[13]
Stilts are still used and produced today and are marketed by pottery suppliers.[7]
Non-pottery uses
Some researchers have used kiln stilts as a settlement substrate for coral larva including those of the species Dendrogyra cylindrus.[14]
^Elliott, Gordon (2006). Aspects of Ceramic History: A Series of Papers Focusing on the Ceramic Artifact As Evidence of Cultural and Technical Developments. Gordon Elliott. p. 73.
ISBN0955769019.
^
abcdPapanicola-Bakirtzē, Dēmētra; Maguire, Eunice Dauterman; Maguire, Henry (1992). Ceramic Art from Byzantine Serres. University of Illinois Press. pp. 25–27.
ISBN0252063031.
^
abHaggarty, George Raymond.
"The Verreville Pottery Glasgow "CD Rom""(PDF). National Museums Scotland Research Repository. National Museums Scotland. Retrieved 8 April 2018.