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Jenny’s Clayhouse – Buffalo

Paint-Your-Own Pottery for One, Two, or Four (Up to 55% Off)

from$10
Buy
No Longer Available
Wed Aug 29 03:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$20
Discount
50%
You Save
$10
  • T460x279
  • Crafty
  • BYO

In a Nutshell

At a BYOB pottery studio, patrons paint practical household items that are fired and ready for pickup the following week

The Fine Print

  • Expires Nov 21, 2012
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Limit 1 per paying customer per group. Valid only for option purchased. Valid in-store only. Must use promotional value in 1 visit. Not valid toward gift certificates or parties.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Archaeologists examine ancient pottery to identify a culture’s preferred cooking methods and to determine which of its members was the World's Greatest Dad. Make timeless memories with this Groupon.

Choose from Three Options

  • $10 for $20 worth of paint-your-own pottery for one
  • $19 for $40 worth of paint-your-own pottery for two
  • $36 for $80 worth of paint-your-own-pottery for four

    Paint-your-own mugs start at $16, piggy banks start at $17, dinner plates start at $18, and boxes emblazoned with a peace sign start at $17.

Jenny’s Clayhouse

Jenny’s Clayhouse, one of Buffalo’s first and only paint-your-own-pottery studios, calls out to artists and craftists looking to cast off faded paint-by-number books to animate stylish ceramics while sipping on home-brought spirits. Sloping picture windows span from floor to ceiling in the airy space, splashing sunlight across the studio’s selection of domestic staples—including mugs, plates, and piggy banks. After guests gleam the once-white objets d'art, Jenny’s staff will summon flames to bake and glaze the handheld masterpieces to protect them from wear and raw-food dieters. Pintsize painters can polish their brushstrokes at Jenny’s summer-camp sessions, or gather friends, teachers, and New York Times art critics for a pottery-painting birthday party or after-school outing.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Disposing of Batteries

Not everyone is privileged enough to own a machine that mashes batteries into an edible, mostly nontoxic soup. If you're not one of the lucky few who owns that machine, use one of these methods to get rid of your batteries:

  • Roll them down a hill
  • Hit them with a baseball bat—they will go somewhere
  • Don't eat 'em, Don Chead-em (give them to Don Cheadle)
  • Feed them to the ocean
  • Do you know a guy named "Battery Bob"? He'll probably take them off your hands.
  • Make a "battery baby" and give it to a woman whose children are grown
  • Recycle?

How far can you hit a battery with a baseball bat?

Jenny’s Clayhouse