Craft & Material Practices

Arts University Plymouth

Undergraduate BA (Hons) Full-time 3 Years Digital media, production, and technologyFilm studiesFashion, textiles, and jewelleryProduct design

Craft & Material Practices BA (Hons) is an undergraduate degree at Arts University Plymouth, based in Plymouth, taught full-time over 3 years. Graduates earn £22,000 on average 15 months after finishing. Entry requires around 104 - 120 UCAS points.

UCAS Points

104 - 120 points

Typical offer · UCAS

Avg. Graduate Salary

£22,000

15 months after graduation · HESA via Discover Uni

About this course

With almost 150,000 people employed in the UK’s craft industry, skilled craftspeople are putting the country on the map for original, forward-thinking contemporary design. The relationship between thinking and making is constantly evolving. Experimentation and innovation are driving a new wave of craftspeople to explore original directions, often looking to develop methods in which we can live harmoniously within natural and fabricated environments while supporting a healthy ecosystem.

Whilst studying BA (Hons) Craft & Material Practices, you’ll have access to our spacious Materials Lab which includes specialist facilities for ceramics, glass, metal, and wood, encouraging you to explore traditional making alongside the rapid digital prototyping facilities in our Fab Lab, giving you the opportunity to reinvent craft for the 21st century. However, learning isn’t limited to our design studios and workshops – you will meet some of the UK’s most inventive and entrepreneurial contemporary makers and thinkers through studio visits, demonstrations, and presentations.

Why Choose this Course?
On this course, you’ll discover an array of material practices, including glassblowing and kiln-formed glass, ceramics, metals in various scales, woodworking, concrete, plastics, and textiles in our state-of-the-art workshops.

You’ll expand your critical approach while honing research and analytical skills. Our programmes foster diversity in both thought and practice, emphasising practical applications alongside reflective, analytical writing. Whilst studying with us, you’ll have access to the Making Futures conference to engage with critical discourses by international makers, curators, and critics, enriching your understanding of contemporary craft.

You’ll study specialist ceramics techniques such as throwing, slip casting, slab-building, coiling, glazing, and raku firing. Working with glass will include hot glass making, kiln-formed glass, coldworking, and lampworking. Working with metals will see you casting, welding, and grinding. If you’re looking to specialise in wood-working, you’ll have the opportunity to learn woodturning, joinery, and CNC routing. In the Fab Lab you will experience laser cutting, CNC milling, and 3D printing.

Through the use of these traditional materials, as well as explorations in smart and adaptive materials, you’ll develop new modes of creative authorship through experimentation, research, and invention.

Enhance Your Creative Practice
Experience a dynamic and stimulating learning environment, fostering experimentation and innovation in practice. Embrace the dynamic interplay between theory and practice, exploring the potential of material and visual exploration, collaborative working, and the contextualisation of histories and contemporary contexts.

Students studying this course learn the ins and outs of enterprise and entrepreneurship, mastering skills in pricing, display, and promotion tailored to diverse markets. Gain practical insights through working on live briefs, pitching to clients, and entering competitions, ensuring a comprehensive understanding of customer needs and market dynamics.

Students engage with live briefs and real clients, collaborating with prestigious institutions such as The Tate Exchange, The Box, MAKE Southwest, and Mount Edgcumbe Estate, fostering professional connections and real-world experience. They also work with industry partners including the Crafts Council, the Goldsmiths’ Company, the Association for Contemporary Jewellery, Hothouse, Craftspace, the Devon Guild of Craftsmen, British Art Medal Society, the Eden Project, Mount Edgcumbe and Dartington Crystal on live briefs, competitions and exhibitions.

Graduates from this course go on to become ceramicists, glass artists, prop designers, ornament/wearables designers, sculptors, architectural surface designers
textile designers, fine artists, gallery and museum professionals after they have graduated.

Entry Requirements

UCAS Tariff Points 104 - 120 points

Study Options

This course is available in 3 study options:

Part-time

Duration: 6 Years

Qualification: BA (Hons)

Location: Plymouth

Avg. grad pay (5y): £22,000

Sandwich

Duration: 4 Years

Qualification: BA (Hons)

Location: Plymouth

Avg. grad pay (5y): £22,000

Full-time Shown above

Duration: 3 Years

Qualification: BA (Hons)

Location: Plymouth

Avg. grad pay (5y): £22,000

Career Prospects

Graduates from this course typically go into the following occupations. Click through for salaries, employment rates and other UK degrees that lead there:

Related Courses

Course Details

Qualification
Bachelor of Arts (with Honours) - BA (Hons)
Study Mode
Full-time
Duration
3 Years
Start Date
2025

2025-entry data — 2026 offers may differ

Academic Year
2025
Campus / Location
Plymouth
Scheme
Undergraduate
Subjects
Digital media, production, and technology, Film studies, Fashion, textiles, and jewellery, Product design
Avg. Graduate Salary
£22,000