Black/blue Ewenny jug (mark)
Blue Ewenny Jug
Blue Ewenny Jug (mark)
Brown Ewenny jug
Brown Ewenny jug (mark)
Brown Ewenny mug
Brown/green Ewenny jug
Brown/green Ewenny jug (mark)
Claypits Ewenny dish
Ewenny ash tray
Ewenny ash tray (mark)
Ewenny Basket
Ewenny eggcup
Ewenny eggcup (mark)
Ewenny jug
Ewenny jug (mark)
Ewenny jug with side handle
Ewenny jug with side handle (mark)
Ewenny ladle
Ewenny ladle (mark)
Ewenny Potteries pieces
Ewenny vase
Ewenny vase (base)
Flattened Ewenny bowl
Flattened Ewenny bowl (mark)
Green Ewenny jug
Green Ewenny jug (mark)
Handled Ewenny bowl
Handled Ewenny bowl (mark)
Inscribed Ewenny jug
Inscribed Ewenny jug (mark)
Large Ewenny bowl
Large Ewenny bowl (mark)
Old Claypits vase
Old Claypits vase (base)
Small Ewenny Jug
Small Ewenny vase
Small Ewenny vase (mark)
Tall Ewenny jug
Tall Ewenny jug (base)
Twisty-handled Ewenny jug
Twisty-handled Ewenny jug (handle)
Twisty-handled Ewenny jug (mark)
Vale Ewenny jug
Vale Ewenny jug (mark)
There have been potteries at Ewenny in South Wales for hundreds of years. The two major companies producing in Ewenny today are the Ewenny Pottery and the Claypits Pottery. Ewenny Pottery is the younger, having been founded in 1815. The origins of Claypits are shrouded in the mists of time; it is at least a hundred years older, possibly much more.
A Claypits apprentice, Evan Jenkins, set up the Ewenny Pottery and the company has stayed in the possession of the Jenkins family to the present day. Jenkinses were also involved with the management of Claypits Pottery.
The potteries of Ewenny were traditional country potteries using unsophisticated equipment and local materials. Naturally, around the turn of the century they found favour with followers of the Arts and Crafts movement, notably Horace Elliot, and this led to their work being seen by a wider circle of people.
Ewenny pots are usually in red clay with slip or mottled glaze decoration. Examples are abundant, making it a good choice for the new collector with limited resources.