The process by which ceramic pots are made can be outlined in a series of consecutive steps. Overall, there are four major stages to the process, starting with digging and delivering sand to a factory, followed by the industrial process in the factory, as well as the coloring stages before the pots become ready for use or sale. Also, this process is a highly machine-driven one, requiring time and equipment for its completion.
The first two stages are somewhat simple: sand is excavated from the ground, which then needs to be delivered to a factory via trucks. Once brought to the factory, the clay has to be crushed before it is mixed with water in the following stage. The mud should be molded, forming a new shape and staying dried from 4 up to 6 hours.
From that point forward, the dried mud obtains the appearance of a half-ready pot, assembled in a clay oven, where the temperature reaches 1000 C to heat the pots. Having been heated, the pots are covered with colors, in which case the main color is green. To ensure the permanence of colors, pots are stacked in a color-firing device, after those products are available to use or sell.
