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Hands in clay, heart in teaching
news
May 28, 2025
Hands in clay, heart in teaching
By MICHAEL BARNES SPECIAL CONTRIBUTOR

On a quiet Eufaula gravel road, near the lake and Carlton Landing, is a small pottery studio that feels more like a home than a ceramic studio. This is the creative space of Zoe Main, a potter, teacher, and Oklahoma native whose journey through clay has taken her across continents, cultures, and right back to her roots. Her studio is named LOAM Ceramics.

“Loam, a rich blend of sand, silt, and clay — it’s the perfect balance of earth elements– the soil of growth, grounding, and potential” At LOAM Ceramics, nurturing is present in every corner: the earthy textures, the welcoming atmosphere, the idea that anyone—regardless of experience—can shape something beautiful from raw material.

“My studio is where people come to get their hands dirty, make mistakes, and hopefully laugh at themselves a little,” Zoe said with a smile. “That’s how the good stuff happens.”

From McAlester to Mexico, Austin to Europe

Zoe grew up in a McAlester family where creativity was part of daily life. Her mother owned a local bake shop, and young Zoe spent hours watching mixing, shaping, kneading, glazing sweet creations.

“I didn’t know it at the time, but I was learning about form, texture, and tools before I ever touched clay: a rolling pin, a wooden spoon, a rubber spatula, measuring cups, recipes— it’s funny how many of those things show up in the pottery studio. Only instead of cake and frosting, now I’m smoothing out and shaping clay and mixing glazes.”

Over time, Zoe followed her creative spirit across borders—living in Mexico, exploring the vibrant arts scene in Austin, and studying traditional ceramics in Latvia, where ancient techniques deepened her respect for the craft.

Inspiration in nature — and beneath the sea While rooted in Oklahoma, Zoe’s most signification inspiration is the ocean.

Her pieces are adorned with sea-glass greens, foamy whites, sandy neutrals, and deep tidepool blues. Some are smooth as driftwood, others craggy like a reef or textured like barnacle-covered stone. The forms seem to have discovered rather than made “I could make pots for a hundred years and never run out of inspiration from the sea. The motion of waves, the play of sunlight underwater, the texture of coral and shells—it’s all in my work.”

The Alchemy of Glaze Zoe doesn’t just shape her clay—she creates her own glazes, a careful, hands-on process that blends science and intuition.

“It’s like being part potter, part alchemist,” she laughed. “You’re mixing silica, feldspar, oxides, ash—basically minerals and dust—and hoping to capture something beautiful when it comes out of the kiln.”

Hands on the wheel and music For Zoe, working at the potter’s wheel is more than mechanical skill—it’s a kind of performance.

She explained: “It’s like playing an instrument. Your hands have to be strong, but also sensitive. You need to know where to place your fingers, how much pressure to use, when to pull and when to hold steady. It’s rhythm. It’s a flow. The wheel hums a steady Everything depends on coordination and breath. When it’s going well, it’s like music.”

She also emphasized the importance of physical awareness. “The speed of the wheel is controlled with your foot, so it’s not just your hands and eyes working— it’s a full-body rhythm. Your foot, your focus, your fingertips— they all have to harmonize, speak the same language.”

Teaching with humor, heart — and rodeo More than an artist, Zoe is a natural teacher— funny, supportive, and full of metaphors that make even the most complex techniques feel approachable.

“She’s the kind of teacher who makes you believe you can do it,” one student said. “Even when your bowl looks like a deflated football, she makes you laugh and try again.”

In moments when a piece falls apart on the wheel, Zoe is ready with her signature line: “He’s not for you. He was centered once, but now… it’s time to let him go. Better start over. Don’t worry—there are plenty more lumps in the sea.”

When a form begins to come together, she leans in and cheers: “Look at him—he’s coming to life. So handsome. I knew he’d be a good one.”

Her studio isn’t about making perfect pottery— it’s about giving people the confidence to try, to fail cheerfully, and to keep going.

Coming Home to Oklahoma

Though her life has spanned different countries and cultures, Zoe said that Oklahoma called her home. “I feel that I belong here.”

Now, in her lakeside studio surrounded by trees, laughter, glazes, clay, she keeps shaping more than pottery. She’s shaping stories, connections, and creativity.

For more information visit: https://www.loamceramicstudio. com.

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