STOKE-ON-TRENT: At the 18th-century Spode pottery works in Stoke-on-Trent, start-up artisans like 22-year-old Emma Price are moving into abandoned buildings and breathing new life into a once-mighty industry. The 10-acre (four-hectare) site in the heart of the Staffordshire city in central England whose name worldwide is synonymous with pottery has become a creative hub that is drawing in a new generation. “It’s a real privilege to be on this site,” said Price, wearing blue overalls flecked in plaster, as she worked on the mould for a bowl. “This offers me the opportunity to do my own thing and gives me the space to work in and do what I’m passionate about,” she told AFP. “A lot of people now are starting to move away from the mass-produced work and want something that’s more bespoke.” Iconic Stoke brands such as Wedgwood, Royal Doulton and Spode are renowned across the globe for their fine chinaware. On a rich seam of clay in England’s West Midlands, Stoke became the world centre of pottery production by 1800. Now fewer than 10,000 people still work in an industry that once employed 80,000 in Stoke, as factories closed and production shifted to Asia over the last 20 years. But young artists are making the most of the latent factory space, skills and expertise that still exist in the 250,000-strong city, not to mention the coveted “Made in Stoke-on-Trent” backstamp. At the Spode works, founded in 1767, a few dozen artisans have moved into the derelict buildings. Cobwebbed storehouses on the site are stuffed with Spode moulds from the past, stacked on wooden shelves marked with names like Louis XV, Old Comport and Rose Tazza. The cavernous China Hall, once bustling with people and machines, now stands like an empty cathedral, filled with light and silence. Ceramic artist Jo Ayre, 34, works in a makeshift studio just off the China Hall, in a space formerly known as Scorpion Alley, so fierce was the reputation of the women who worked there. Besides producing her own works, she runs adult learning classes, teaching groups of locals who want to know more about the craft that made their city’s name. Among those taking their first steps in learning how to manipulate the clay was 36-year-old barber Craig Urwin. “We are doing it in the old-fashioned way, by hand. It’s fascinating,” he said.