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  2. 17 Things You Should Always Buy at a Thrift Store - AOL

    www.aol.com/17-things-always-buy-thrift...

    1. Pots and Pans. Before you drop hundreds on new pots and pans, hit your local thrift store first. It may be hit or miss, but if you’re lucky, you can score cast iron, Dutch ovens, and copper ...

  3. Clay pot cooking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clay_pot_cooking

    Cooking in unglazed clay pots which are first immersed in water dates at least to the Etruscans in first century BC but likely dates to several centuries earlier. [1] The Romans adapted the technique and the cooking vessel, which became known as the Roman pot, a cooking vessel similar to those made since April 1967 by the German company Römertopf.

  4. Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pottery

    However, the lowest quality common red clay was adequate for low-temperature fires used for the earliest pots. Clay tempered with sand, grit, crushed shell or crushed pottery were often used to make bonfire-fired ceramics because they provided an open-body texture that allowed water and volatile components of the clay to escape freely.

  5. Olla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olla

    Dense soil (clay) does not water out as far as good soil. Large ollas, with a capacity of (say) 11 liters, will water longer than a smaller 1 liter olla, for example. Olla, or clay pot, irrigation is considered the most efficient watering system by many [ quantify ] , since the plants are never over- or under-watered, saving from 50% to 70% in ...

  6. Flowerpot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flowerpot

    The size of the pot will in part determine the size of the plants. Generally, plants planted in bigger pots will end up being larger; on average plants increase 40–45% in biomass for a doubling in pot volume. [16] This will in part be due to a higher availability of nutrients and water in larger pots, but also because roots will get less pot ...

  7. Ceramics of Indigenous peoples of the Americas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramics_of_indigenous...

    Pinch pots and other small clay objects could be formed directly by hand. Hohokam potters and their descendants in the American Southwest employed the paddle-and-anvil technique, in which the interior clay wall of a pot was supported by an anvil, while the exterior was beaten with a paddle, smoothing the surface. [4]