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The Essential Guide to Mold Making & Slip Casting

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For potters, mold making is invaluable because it allows them to slip-cast identical multiples of their work—and this newly revised, full-color edition of Andrew Martin’s classic is the definitive guide to the craft. No other volume has shown the processes in such how-to detail. It’s overflowing with hundreds of photos, key techniques, projects, master artist profiles, and troubleshooting tips.

A thorough introduction addresses materials and tools, and presents Martin’s simple, unique template method for making clay prototypes. Create easy one-piece molds to make tiles, bowls, and platters, or multi-piece molds for more complex forms. An extensive overview covers slip formulation, while offering highly desired slip recipes for low-, mid-, and high-fire clay bodies.

This will be the standard reference in every ceramist’s library.

159 pages, Hardcover

First published April 1, 2007

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114 people want to read

About the author

Andrew Martin

44 books
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name.

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Kasia.
355 reviews2 followers
September 9, 2023
This is such a great resource! I especially love the part near the back when he outlines common problems, what they look like, and how they can be problem solved!

Great! 👍🏻
Profile Image for The Adaptable Educator.
474 reviews
November 2, 2025
Andrew Martin’s The Essential Guide to Mold Making & Slip Casting stakes a clear claim to usefulness: it is a book written by a practitioner for practitioners, and it reads that way—methodical, economy-minded, and exquisitely practical. But what elevates this manual beyond a mere how-to compendium is the way the author balances procedural exactitude with an attentiveness to the material poetics of clay-making. The book is both a technician’s blueprint and a quiet meditation on the constraints and freedoms that different moulding strategies impose on form.
Structure and Pedagogical Voice
Martin organizes the book with admirable clarity. Early chapters establish the fundamentals—materials, tools, safety, and studio setup—before moving into discrete mould types and then into slip-casting techniques and troubleshooting. Each chapter functions as a short, self-contained lesson: clear learning objectives, step-by-step sequences, and compact checklists for what to do (and what to avoid). This instructional scaffolding makes the book especially effective for beginners who need to translate concept into action without getting overwhelmed.
It’s voice is that of an experienced instructor: unpretentious, encouraging, and unsentimental. He trusts the reader’s intelligence but does not assume prior jargon; technical terms are introduced precisely and repeatedly until they become usable. This pedagogical restraint—teach once thoroughly, then let the work speak—mirrors best practices in studio teaching and is one of the book’s strongest virtues.
Technical Rigour and Practical Detail
Where many craft books aim to inspire, this one insists on reliability. The book’s diagrams, photographs, and annotated process shots are chosen to resolve common points of confusion: how to seal a multi-part mould, why a particular release agent behaves differently with a certain plaster formulation, or how slip viscosity affects the thickness of a cast. These are the “load-bearing” moments for ceramic practice, and Martin treats them as such.
He does not shy away from numbers and proportions—mixing ratios, drying times, and recommended thicknesses are offered with the sort of specificity that allows a reader to replicate outcomes. Yet he also acknowledges variability: climate, slip recipes, and kiln schedules differ between studios. Rather than present his figures as immutable laws, he frames them as well-tested starting points. That balance between precision and adaptability is what makes the book useful across contexts.
Visual and Material Sensibility
A strong visual sense runs through the book. Photographs are not merely documentary; they’re didactic—shot to emphasize junctions, seams, and problem areas rather than to flatter finished objects. This decision is pedagogically shrewd: the images function as corrective mirrors for the reader’s own work. Layout and typography echo the book’s ethos—clean, utilitarian, and devoid of distracting ornamentation—so the reader’s attention stays on process.
The author is also attentive to material character. He invites readers to think not only about how to replicate a form but how different moulding choices influence surface, texture, and the gesture of a piece. In places the book approaches the territory of material theory, asking the kind of questions you’d expect from a studio seminar: What does a rigid plaster mould do to the spontaneity of a thrown form? How does an articulated flexible mould permit a sculptural complexity that a one-piece mould does not? These reflections give the text a depth many manuals lack.
Strengths and Limits
The book’s major strength is its reliability. It will likely become a staple on the workbench of ceramics students and small-studio potters because it reduces trial-and-error time and demystifies processes that novices find intimidating.
Two limitations are worth noting. First, the book’s focus on technique sometimes sidelines extended discussion of artistic intent. Readers looking for essays on slip casting as a conceptual strategy in contemporary ceramics will need to supplement this with theoretical or curatorial texts. Second, while the book handles traditional and contemporary materials well, readers interested in the most recent advances in materials science—new food-safe silicones, bio-based release agents, or industrial rapid-prototyping hybrids—may find the treatment necessarily conventional. This is not so much a flaw as a consequence of the book’s mission: to teach reliable studio methods rather than to function as an exhaustive survey of cutting-edge industry innovations.
Who Will Benefit
This guide is ideal for art-school students, ceramics instructors, independent studio potters, and artists wishing to incorporate reproducible forms into small production runs. It is less a book for the purely theoretical reader and more a steady companion for hands-on learning. For teachers, its chapter structure and clear visuals make it readily adaptable for coursework; for advanced practitioners, the troubleshooting sections and technical specifics provide quick-reference value.
The Essential Guide to Mold Making & Slip Casting is a measured, well-crafted manual that does what it promises: it teaches essential studio practices with clarity and care. Andrew Martin’s balance of technical detail, thoughtful illustration, and reflective notes on material behaviour produces a volume that is both utilitarian and quietly thoughtful. It may not answer every avant-garde question about the future of moulding technologies, but as a practical, studio-tested handbook it is exemplary—a book that puts tools squarely in the hands of makers and gives them the vocabulary to use them confidently.
Profile Image for Susan.
15 reviews3 followers
August 12, 2008
Learned some new techniques. Good refresher.
Profile Image for Danielle Levi.
7 reviews
June 12, 2024
4.5 rounding down. Good information but presentation could be better. Instructions were hard to interpret without pictures and many of them were located on a different page or were omitted. Would be amazing as a video series!
Profile Image for Scott Andrews.
454 reviews5 followers
July 18, 2020
Excellent book. One to work from for the next year or two.
Profile Image for Rachel Rose.
68 reviews2 followers
June 21, 2021
Despite the look of this book being very outdated, the information is good. Don't pay hundreds of dollars to join an online class or Facebook group. Buy this book for $10 like I did.
15 reviews1 follower
June 3, 2022
A wonderful informational book teaching readers how to create slip casting molds for ceramic pieces and then showing how to create the slip, pour it and then remove the mold. The picture and step by step instructions in this book made it especially easy to understand the fundamental concepts of slip casting and mold making. This book taught me how to create a plaster mold and then a silicon one for future mold making. Then it shows pouring the slip to create the perfect wall thickness. This allows for the creation of identical pieces in a very short period of time. Wonderful book, such a joy to read.

I could not find a good golden line because the book focuses on giving instructions on creating and using a lip mold. the quote would just be the instruction on how to make the mold.
Profile Image for Mark Boszko.
36 reviews10 followers
September 15, 2016
Quite a lot more than I need to know for making tiki mugs, and in other ways, not nearly enough. I realize it isn't targeted to that very specific niche, but that's what I'm looking to learn. Still, there's enough depth here that I expect I will get more out of it once I've become a bit more experienced.
Profile Image for Cattfrancisco.
24 reviews
May 5, 2013
Good practical guide to mold making and slip casting. Lots of visual reference.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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