PORT ISAAC POTTERY - Meet Faye
We interview Faye Hawkins, a potter, ceramicist and painter about how she got into the craft, her inspiration and her unique developing style.
Faye's work can be viewed at her family's pottery in Port Isaac.
For more information on the pottery and its resident artists please visit
Filmed by Toby Lobb @ ikandimedia.co.uk
Port Isaac Pottery, Cornwall, England
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Filmed on Vivitar VHS 830XHD
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Port Isaac, Cornwall
Port Isaac is a small fishing village on the Atlantic coast of north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The nearest towns are Wadebridge and Camelford, both ten miles away. Port Gaverne, commonly mistaken to be part of Port Isaac, is a nearby hamlet that has its own history.
UK Cornwall - Port Isaac
A summer day in the picturesque Port Isaac village in Cornwall UK.
PORT ISAAC POTTERY - Meet Billy
We interview Billy Hawkins, a potter, ceramicist and founder of Port Isaac Pottery about how he got into pottery, his inspirations and his passion, all set to the backdrop of him creating a beautiful cider jug.
Billy's work can be viewed at his own pottery in Port Isaac.
For more information on the pottery and its resident artists please visit
Filmed by Toby Lobb @ ikandimedia.co.uk
Places to see in ( Port Isaac - UK )
Places to see in ( Port Isaac - UK )
Port Isaac is a small and picturesque fishing village on the Atlantic coast of north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The nearest towns are Wadebridge and Camelford, both ten miles away. Port Gaverne, commonly mistaken to be part of Port Isaac, is a nearby hamlet that has its own history. The meaning of the Cornish name is corn port, indicating a trade in corn from the arable inland district. Since the 1980s the village has served as backdrop to various television productions, including the ITV series Doc Martin, and is home to the group Fisherman's Friends, sea-shanty singers.
Port Isaac's pier was constructed during the reign of Henry VIII. ...Tudor pier and breakwater have now yielded to a strong new sea-wall balanced by an arm on the opposite side of the cove, and we do not doubt that the fishermen sleep more soundly in their beds on stormy nights. (Arthur Mee: Cornwall; The King's England; London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1937, p. 184.) The village centre dates from the 18th and 19th centuries, from a time when its prosperity was tied to local coastal freight and fishing. The port handled cargoes of coal, wood, stone, ores, limestone, salt, pottery and heavy goods which were conveyed along its narrow streets. Small coastal sailing vessels were built below Roscarrock Hill.
Fishermen still work from the Platt, landing their catches of fish, crab and lobsters. The historic core of the village was designated a Conservation Area in 1971 and North Cornwall District Council reviewed this in 2008 with the endorsement of detailed Port Isaac Conservation Area Appraisal document and a related Conservation Area Management Plan. The village has around 90 Listed buildings (all Grade II).
The Port Isaac lifeboat station was established in 1869 following the delivery of two lifeboats, Richard and Sarah. The former boathouse building was until recently the Post Office but is now a gift shop. In the early 1960s the Royal National Lifeboat Institution introduced the Inshore Lifeboat, and in 1967 the Port Isaac Station reopened with a new class D inshore lifeboat.
Until the closure of the Okehampton to Wadebridge railway line in 1966 the village was served by a station at Port Isaac Road. The station, some three miles (five kilometres) inland from Port Isaac, opened on 1 June 1895, and had a passing loop and a single siding with headshunt that served a goods shed and loading dock. All its buildings were built of local stone: station building and signal box locking room on the up platform, the small waiting shelter on the down platform, and the goods shed.
( Port Isaac - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Port Isaac . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Port Isaac - UK
Join us for more :
Profile on Port Isaac: Barbara Hawkins
Port Isaac is a beautiful and picturesque fishing village in North Cornwall, England. It also plays an important backdrop to Buffalo Pictures' 'Doc Martin' starring Martin Clunes. In this video series, Doc Martin Online is putting the spot light on the location and on its many lovely residents. This video profiles Barbara Hawkins who owns the locally pottery and investigates about Port Isaac and Doc Martin from her perspective.
Port Isaac (Port Wehn)
Port Isaac is a small and picturesque fishing village on the Atlantic coast of north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.
Port Isaac 4K
Port Isaac, Cornwall
June 2016
The Linhay at St Teath, nr Port Isaac, Cornwall
In a quiet, yet very convenient location, about a 12 minute drive from the famous Cornish fishing village of Port Isaac, this lovely barn conversion has a great south facing garden which looks out over open fields towards the nearby village of St Teath. The local pub, the White Hart is renowned for food and atmosphere and a great reason to stay at The Linhay!
See all of our properties at
Book The Linhay at St Teath online at
PORT ISAAC POTTERY - Throwing a Pot
In this video Billy shows us how to create a pot from three pieces of clay.
Billy's work can be viewed at his own pottery in Port Isaac.
For more information on the pottery and its resident artists please visit
Filmed by Toby Lobb @ ikandimedia.co.uk
Our day at Port Isaac
Greg and Wendy visit Port Isaac during a trip to Cornwall.
Port Isaac
This video is of the village of Port Isaac, near Wadebridge, Cornwall, UK. Port Isaac is where Doc Martin is filmed. This video has Port Isaac beach, Squeeze-ee-belly alley, the old chapel, Port Isaac village and Doc Martin's house. Port Isaac is also where the Fishermen's friends are from. The village is quite busy but you do not normally get people in your way (because they all stay around with each other). It is more busy at the bottom of the village than at Doc Martin's house (or Fern cottage). St Peter's church is also very quiet and is rare to have more than one family in it at a time (unless something is happening in it). If you do not like Port Isaac you could go to Port Gavern, just down the road. In Doc Martin Port Isaac is called Port Wenn, this has started people calling Port Isaac Port Wenn.
Places to see in ( Port Isaac - UK )
Places to see in ( Port Isaac - UK )
Port Isaac is a small and picturesque fishing village on the Atlantic coast of north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The nearest towns are Wadebridge and Camelford, both ten miles away. Port Gaverne, commonly mistaken to be part of Port Isaac, is a nearby hamlet that has its own history. The meaning of the Cornish name is corn port, indicating a trade in corn from the arable inland district. Since the 1980s the village has served as backdrop to various television productions, including the ITV series Doc Martin, and is home to the group Fisherman's Friends, sea-shanty singers.
Port Isaac's pier was constructed during the reign of Henry VIII. ...Tudor pier and breakwater have now yielded to a strong new sea-wall balanced by an arm on the opposite side of the cove, and we do not doubt that the fishermen sleep more soundly in their beds on stormy nights. (Arthur Mee: Cornwall; The King's England; London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1937, p. 184.) The village centre dates from the 18th and 19th centuries, from a time when its prosperity was tied to local coastal freight and fishing. The port handled cargoes of coal, wood, stone, ores, limestone, salt, pottery and heavy goods which were conveyed along its narrow streets. Small coastal sailing vessels were built below Roscarrock Hill.
Fishermen still work from the Platt, landing their catches of fish, crab and lobsters. The historic core of the village was designated a Conservation Area in 1971 and North Cornwall District Council reviewed this in 2008 with the endorsement of detailed Port Isaac Conservation Area Appraisal document and a related Conservation Area Management Plan. The village has around 90 Listed buildings (all Grade II).
The Port Isaac lifeboat station was established in 1869 following the delivery of two lifeboats, Richard and Sarah. The former boathouse building was until recently the Post Office but is now a gift shop. In the early 1960s the Royal National Lifeboat Institution introduced the Inshore Lifeboat, and in 1967 the Port Isaac Station reopened with a new class D inshore lifeboat.
Until the closure of the Okehampton to Wadebridge railway line in 1966 the village was served by a station at Port Isaac Road. The station, some three miles (five kilometres) inland from Port Isaac, opened on 1 June 1895, and had a passing loop and a single siding with headshunt that served a goods shed and loading dock. All its buildings were built of local stone: station building and signal box locking room on the up platform, the small waiting shelter on the down platform, and the goods shed.
( Port Isaac - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Port Isaac . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Port Isaac - UK
Join us for more :
Slipway Hotel - Business For Sale - Port Isaac (home of Doc Martin)
Slipway Hotel is for sale! It is a location synonymous with Doc Martin and Port Isaac.
If interested please contact exeter@christie.com
Port Gaverne Hotel, Port Isaac
Port Gaverne Hotel, Port Gaverne, Port Isaac, Cornwall, PL29 3SQ, England
Click on the blue link above to read more about the Port Gaverne Hotel or to book your stay there.Or visit for bargain prices on many more hotels in Cornwall in the UK and around the globe.
Port Isaac Cookery Sketches
Dick and James Strawbridge cook potted pork in a Cornish orchard
Places to see in ( Port Isaac - UK )
Places to see in ( Port Isaac - UK )
Port Isaac is a small and picturesque fishing village on the Atlantic coast of north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The nearest towns are Wadebridge and Camelford, both ten miles away. Port Gaverne, commonly mistaken to be part of Port Isaac, is a nearby hamlet that has its own history. The meaning of the Cornish name is corn port, indicating a trade in corn from the arable inland district. Since the 1980s the village has served as backdrop to various television productions, including the ITV series Doc Martin, and is home to the group Fisherman's Friends, sea-shanty singers.
Port Isaac's pier was constructed during the reign of Henry VIII. ...Tudor pier and breakwater have now yielded to a strong new sea-wall balanced by an arm on the opposite side of the cove, and we do not doubt that the fishermen sleep more soundly in their beds on stormy nights. (Arthur Mee: Cornwall; The King's England; London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1937, p. 184.) The village centre dates from the 18th and 19th centuries, from a time when its prosperity was tied to local coastal freight and fishing. The port handled cargoes of coal, wood, stone, ores, limestone, salt, pottery and heavy goods which were conveyed along its narrow streets. Small coastal sailing vessels were built below Roscarrock Hill.
Fishermen still work from the Platt, landing their catches of fish, crab and lobsters. The historic core of the village was designated a Conservation Area in 1971 and North Cornwall District Council reviewed this in 2008 with the endorsement of detailed Port Isaac Conservation Area Appraisal document and a related Conservation Area Management Plan. The village has around 90 Listed buildings (all Grade II).
The Port Isaac lifeboat station was established in 1869 following the delivery of two lifeboats, Richard and Sarah. The former boathouse building was until recently the Post Office but is now a gift shop. In the early 1960s the Royal National Lifeboat Institution introduced the Inshore Lifeboat, and in 1967 the Port Isaac Station reopened with a new class D inshore lifeboat.
Until the closure of the Okehampton to Wadebridge railway line in 1966 the village was served by a station at Port Isaac Road. The station, some three miles (five kilometres) inland from Port Isaac, opened on 1 June 1895, and had a passing loop and a single siding with headshunt that served a goods shed and loading dock. All its buildings were built of local stone: station building and signal box locking room on the up platform, the small waiting shelter on the down platform, and the goods shed.
( Port Isaac - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Port Isaac . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Port Isaac - UK
Join us for more :
Places to see in ( Port Isaac - UK )
Places to see in ( Port Isaac - UK )
Port Isaac is a small and picturesque fishing village on the Atlantic coast of north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The nearest towns are Wadebridge and Camelford, both ten miles away. Port Gaverne, commonly mistaken to be part of Port Isaac, is a nearby hamlet that has its own history. The meaning of the Cornish name is corn port, indicating a trade in corn from the arable inland district. Since the 1980s the village has served as backdrop to various television productions, including the ITV series Doc Martin, and is home to the group Fisherman's Friends, sea-shanty singers.
Port Isaac's pier was constructed during the reign of Henry VIII. ...Tudor pier and breakwater have now yielded to a strong new sea-wall balanced by an arm on the opposite side of the cove, and we do not doubt that the fishermen sleep more soundly in their beds on stormy nights. (Arthur Mee: Cornwall; The King's England; London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1937, p. 184.) The village centre dates from the 18th and 19th centuries, from a time when its prosperity was tied to local coastal freight and fishing. The port handled cargoes of coal, wood, stone, ores, limestone, salt, pottery and heavy goods which were conveyed along its narrow streets. Small coastal sailing vessels were built below Roscarrock Hill.
Fishermen still work from the Platt, landing their catches of fish, crab and lobsters. The historic core of the village was designated a Conservation Area in 1971 and North Cornwall District Council reviewed this in 2008 with the endorsement of detailed Port Isaac Conservation Area Appraisal document and a related Conservation Area Management Plan. The village has around 90 Listed buildings (all Grade II).
The Port Isaac lifeboat station was established in 1869 following the delivery of two lifeboats, Richard and Sarah. The former boathouse building was until recently the Post Office but is now a gift shop. In the early 1960s the Royal National Lifeboat Institution introduced the Inshore Lifeboat, and in 1967 the Port Isaac Station reopened with a new class D inshore lifeboat.
Until the closure of the Okehampton to Wadebridge railway line in 1966 the village was served by a station at Port Isaac Road. The station, some three miles (five kilometres) inland from Port Isaac, opened on 1 June 1895, and had a passing loop and a single siding with headshunt that served a goods shed and loading dock. All its buildings were built of local stone: station building and signal box locking room on the up platform, the small waiting shelter on the down platform, and the goods shed.
( Port Isaac - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Port Isaac . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Port Isaac - UK
Join us for more :
Port Issac - Cornawll, UK
A small fishing port made famous by the TV series Doc Martin