The Colour Room Apr 2026

They became the "Bizarre Girls." Under Clarice’s direction, the "Colour Room" became a laboratory of rebellion. They threw out the delicate brushes and used bold, thick strokes. They ignored the drab pastels of the Victorian era and embraced the screaming neons of the Jazz Age.

Her chance came in the form of Colley Shorter, the factory owner. Colley was a man with a sharp eye for talent and an even sharper boredom with the status quo. One afternoon, he found Clarice in a corner of the decorating shop, painting a discarded bowl with a pattern that looked like a lightning strike in a garden. "What do you call that?" Colley asked, looming over her.

But inside the mind of Clarice Cliff, it was raining orange, royal blue, and emerald green. The Colour Room

In the grit-grey heart of the 1920s Staffordshire Potteries, the world was a study in soot. Smoke from the bottle kilns—those great brick mammoths—constantly choked the sky, staining every brick and every spirit a dull, repetitive charcoal.

Years later, when Clarice stood on the roof of the factory, she looked out at the bottle kilns. They were still grey, and the smoke still hung heavy in the air. But as she looked down at her own hands, stained permanently with the dyes of a thousand sunsets, she smiled. They became the "Bizarre Girls

Clarice was a "lithographer" at the A.J. Wilkinson factory, a job that required precision but offered no room for soul. While the other girls gossiped over tea about suitors and silk stockings, Clarice spent her lunch breaks staring at "seconds"—the broken, rejected pots piled in the yard like white bones. To the masters of the factory, they were trash. To Clarice, they were blank canvases waiting for a revolution.

Colley saw the fire in her eyes—a spark that matched the vibrant pigments on her palette. Against the advice of every senior manager, he gave her a small, cramped room at the back of the Newport Pottery. It was cold, damp, and smelled of turpentine, but to Clarice, it was a palace. Her chance came in the form of Colley

She hadn't just painted pots; she had broken the grey. In the little room where she started, the color hadn't just stayed on the clay—it had leaked out into the world, proving that even in the darkest, grittiest corner of the earth, beauty is just a bold stroke away.