Use of the slip cup and other tools of the art, as deomstrated at the Pennsylvania Farm Museum of Landis Valley, enable today's potters to create redware pottery in the traditional manner of early Pennsylvania Dutch settlers in lancasr County, Pennsylvania.
Provenance
Photographs and slides donated by Discover Lancaster/Pennsylvania Dutch Country Visitors Bureau, June 2016.
Rural life crafts including use of the schnitzelbank (Pennsylvania Dutch for "cutting bench") are demonstrated at the Pennsylvania Farm Museum of Landis Valley during Harvest Days. Over 60 Lancaster County craftsmen share their skills annually during the celebration, always held the first weekend of October. Craft Days are also held annual during the first weekend of June.
Provenance
Photographs and slides donated by Discover Lancaster/Pennsylvania Dutch Country Visitors Bureau, June 2016.
Visitors from all over the world come to the Pennsylvania Farm Museum of Landis Valley to experience the sights, sounds, and smells of long-gone eras. Throughout the museum's grounds and 23 furnished buildings, guides and demonstrating craftspersons explain and ue 18th and 19th century skills such as driving a Conestoga wagon to interpret rural Pennsylvania life.
Provenance
Photographs and slides donated by Discover Lancaster/Pennsylvania Dutch Country Visitors Bureau, June 2016.