Egypt potter makes vases from clay and love

A vase made at Mostafa el-Agoury`s pottery workshop in the village of Shamma in Egypt`s Nile Delta Menoufiya province, is photographed on 21 June 2018. Photo: AFP
A vase made at Mostafa el-Agoury`s pottery workshop in the village of Shamma in Egypt`s Nile Delta Menoufiya province, is photographed on 21 June 2018. Photo: AFP

As a law student in Egypt's Menufiya province, Mustafa al-Agoury was simply looking for a job to get him through his last year of classes.

But when a friend gave him a pottery kiln, the young man "fell in love" with the craft, which he quickly turned into a profession.

"A friend gave me an oven as a gift, and I worked on it at home... in one year, I fell in love with the trade," said Agoury, now 40, speaking from his workshop in the village of Shamma, in the Nile Delta province north of Cairo.

One of Mostafa el-Agoury`s employees holds a clay vase at his pottery workshop in the village of Shamma in Egypt`s Nile Delta Menoufiya province on 21 June 2018. Photo: AFP
One of Mostafa el-Agoury`s employees holds a clay vase at his pottery workshop in the village of Shamma in Egypt`s Nile Delta Menoufiya province on 21 June 2018. Photo: AFP

He and his 15 employees extract clay from different types of soil found across Egypt, particularly along the Red Sea coast and near the southern Nile River city of Aswan.

They work on large wooden benches, cluttered with pots of paint, rudimentary tools and classically shaped vases decked out in wild colours.

Row upon row of grey, unfinished pieces line the workshop's edges, waiting to be given a glossy finish.

One of Mostafa el-Agoury`s employees prepares pieces to be dried at his pottery workshop in the village of Shamma in Egypt`s Nile Delta Menoufiya province on 21 June 2018. Photo: AFP
One of Mostafa el-Agoury`s employees prepares pieces to be dried at his pottery workshop in the village of Shamma in Egypt`s Nile Delta Menoufiya province on 21 June 2018. Photo: AFP

Some are spray-painted with bright hues of blue, green, yellow or red -- sometimes a swirl of all four. Others are hand-painted.

It takes between seven and 10 days to finish one piece, depending on its size.

Agoury estimated his workshop produces about 1,000 pieces a month, many of which take pride of place in the salons of Cairo.