inga isaeva, chief artist of the ceramic workshop, conducts our heroes to the table with ready-made samples is the one that will be in your interior. well, at least they got the color scheme right. go ahead. this is the very beginning of our work, the clay preparation room. the clay takes more than 2 months to reach this state, it is mixed with water like dough, matures like dough, then it is passed through an extruder to expel the air to streamline the structure, i thought once the mold is ready, here it is the most ordinary clay or not, it is terracotta clay, it's not the best ordinary, this is historical clay, from which you actually see tiles on monasteries, churches, in those days, too, all this technology. they followed , well, something like this, yes, they didn’t have extruders, but the labor of serfs was cheaper, the master tamps the clay into a mold with measured blows, you told ing me behind the scenes what’s in this workshop... then the product is taken out and sent to dry, and then for the first firing. after the oven we get the so-called cozy products, you see, they are not co