Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble at Designers in Residence 2012

In a movie filmed by Alice Masters for the Designers in Residence exhibition at the Design Museum, Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble explain how they turned clay dug from the muddy banks of the river Thames into ceramic tableware.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Recent graduates Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble produced the Wharfware collection as a response to the Design Museum’s theme of “thrift”.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

‘Thrift for us is essentially making something out of nothing,” says Trimble in the movie. Looking at the museum’s surroundings to see what they could take from the local area, the designers found that the mud under Tower Bridge had the potential to be made into ceramics, and the area had also been home to a thriving ceramics industry 300 years ago.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Once they’d dug up the mud and brought it back to their studio, they experimented with additives to prepare the clay for firing.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Carol Sachs

“Conventionally, pottery clays are heavily engineered with additives to give them specific properties,” they told Dezeen. “Wishing to keep the clay pure and stay true to the brief, we devised a manufacturing technique of moulding at high pressure.”

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

After perfecting the mixture, they formed the shapes in a homemade press, using a car jack to push the clay into its mould. Inspired by centuries-old tableware made in the Tower Bridge area and wanting to maximise space in the kiln, they created the pieces in tesselating hexagonal shapes.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

The Wharfware collection includes three sizes of bowls, a serving plate, a trivet and a fish brick, which pays homage to Terence Conran’s chicken brick steam cooker, explains Medley-Whitfield, while also referencing the clay’s origins in the river Thames.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

Last year Medley-Whitfield experimented with casting copper-bullion bowls as a way for investors to display the increasingly valuable metal at home.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

We’ve already featured two movies by Alice Masters about the Designers in Residence programme – in one, Lawrence Lek shows how his system of bent plywood pieces can be tied together to make furniture and architecture, and in another, Yuri Suzuki explains how he made a radio with a circuit board arranged like the London Tube map.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

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Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

Photographs are movie stills by Alice Masters, except where stated.

Here’s some more information from Medley-Whitfield and Trimble:


Designers Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble Share an interest in sourcing local materials and using bespoke manufacturing processes. Together they experiment with how products can be made to embody local identity and heritage to give economic, environmental and emotional benefits.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Carol Sachs

Inspired by the historic Southwark ceramic industry that thrived in the area surrounding the Design Museum 300 years ago, Oscar and Harry have produced a ceramic tableware range, Wharfware, made of clay dug from the banks of the Thames around Tower Bridge.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

Before the clay could be used it had to undergo an extensive refinement process. The clay is laid out to dry before being soaked to a slip. It is then passed through progressively fine grades of mesh to remove impurities.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

After further drying on plaster to achieve the desired consistence, the clay is ready to be moulded and then fired. A complex testing process was used to find the right composition of clay, sand and firing temperature.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Luke Hayes

The forms of the works were process driven. Rather then using traditional studio pottery techniques unlikely to work with the unpredictable raw clay, Oscar and Harry applied an industrial approach. The moulds were designed to allow the clay to be shaped under pressure reducing the likelihood of warping and distortion.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Luke Hayes

The geometric shapes help the pieces to be easily remove from the moulds whilst also allowing them to tessellate in the kiln meaning more units per firing, bring down overall costs. In creating Wharfware, Oscar and Harry have created a locally relevant product in an innovative and resourceful way.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Luke Hayes

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Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

New Designers 2011: as the value of copper increases, product design graduate Oscar Medley-Whitfield has minted a range of copper-bullion bowls so investors can display their assets at home.

His Worth the Weight project involved finding a suitable low-tech way to cast copper in the teaching workshops at Kingston University.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

The material tends to absorb oxygen when molten then become aerated and brittle when cooled – not very useful for making ingots.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

He settled on a traditional Japanese technique, shown in the movie above, where molten copper is poured into a cloth inside a pan of boiling water.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

This slows the cooling process and reduces the amount of oxygen incorporated, resulting in a pure and dense casting.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

Medley-Whitfield developed the project in his final year and presented it at graduate show New Designers, which took place in London from 6 to 9 July. He also showed a series of benches that rely on each other for supportSee all our stories about New Designers 2011 here.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

The details below are from Oscar Medley-Whitfield:


Worth the Weight
The un-Final Collection

Worth The Weight is a project driven by an insight into the worth and projected worth of the commodity, copper.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

It is an experimental, material and process lead project that is focused around developing a method of casting which is suitable for copper.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

Copper is a difficult metal to cast with as it has a tendency to absorb up to 100% of is own volume in oxygen when in its molten state.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

This makes it extremely hard to get refined results from the casting processes as the additional oxygen creates air pockets leaving the finished object with an aerated texture and brittle composite. For these reasons copper is little cast within industry.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

The cloth mould water casting process tackles the issues surrounding copper casting in a number of ways. The lack of oxygen in water ensures a more refined surface finish then conventional moulds. It also supplies a slower cooling process, which gives the metal a dense concentration.

Worth the Weight by Oscar Medley-Whitfield

Although the bowls are presented and finished as a final collection they are in no way demonstrations of cloth mould water castings full potential. Each bowl is a show of slight variation on the process and with each variation comes new opportunity for process refinement.


See also:

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Andre Pereira at
New Designers
Ben Fursdon at
New Designers
Orawee Choedamphai at
New Designers