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Here are two different vessels. The one on the right is a vessel that has a lot of small and large cut outs. It looks very organized and geometric. The few larger holes gives it variety. A you can see the progressive pictures, you can tell that it was constructed by slab construction. The one on the right is a simple shorter organic pot that has two 3-D bees and an engraved bee path behind them. It was made by the coil construction method and then smoothed out. Both vessels together incorporate lines, shapes and texture. The slab vessel incorporates shapes like the circles, and the texture the cut outs create. The coils vessel on the right use lines and texture in the paths of the bees, and shapes with the bees themselves. There wasn't an artists used for inspiration for the pot on the right, however the inspiration for the pot on the left was a woman named Vanessa Weber. She specializes in geometric vases and pots. The vessel on the left is meant to be some sort of pencil holder that can store pencils, rulers, pens, colored pencils, erasers and more. The pot on the left was inspired by nature. It's designed to look like a smoothed out version of a bee hive. It's function is to hold coins like pennies and other small objects. Both of these vessels are very successful. They both fulfill my initial goal for the project. They look just as imagined and accurately display both geometric design and an organic design.