Fixed-priced deals offer certainty for a set period but, if prices drop, people could find themselves stuck at a higher price.
The forecaster Cornwall Insight, which tracks the energy market, has suggested prices could increase again slightly in January, due to rising wholesale costs paid by suppliers.
It says the typical home could pay £1,762 a year.
Given prices are rising, Ofgem says people should consider fixed deals as an option.
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However, it says they should seek independent advice and consider what is most important for them – the lowest price or the security of a fixed deal.
Price comparison site Uswitch says the market for fixes is the best in recent years.
Some deals allow you to fix for a year, some for longer.
Uswitch warns customers should check whether fixed deals have exit fees before signing up and ensure they fully understand the terms of the contract.
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Because the price cap changes every three months, it is difficult to know with any certainty whether a fixed tariff is a good deal. The longer the fixed term, the greater the uncertainty.
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
In electing a new prime minister, Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic party could have opted for generational change in the form of 43-year-old Shinjiro Koizumi. It could have chosen a return to the nationalistic conservatism of former leader Shinzo Abe — and with it a first female prime minister — in the shape of Sanae Takaichi. Instead it went through door number three, an unexpected one, and selected 67-year-old Shigeru Ishiba, something of an outsider within his own party, who triumphed and won the top job at the fifth time of asking.
Ishiba is widely respected as an expert in defence policy and an honest, conscientious leader who is close to his rural constituents in Tottori prefecture. He has served as minister of defence and minister of agriculture, among other posts. Yet he is a singular figure, more popular with the public than with his parliamentary colleagues, who has spent the past decade sitting outside the main currents of Japanese politics. On economics, on the US-Japan alliance and in the management of his own party, some of Ishiba’s past positions will make it harder to run a successful administration. The new prime minister has his work cut out for him.
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Ishiba’s most immediate challenge will be to form a cabinet. Given his enmity with power brokers such as former prime minister Taro Aso, it will be tricky to get the balance right. Ishiba’s path to victory relied on support from regional party members, who catapulted him into a run-off among parliamentarians with Takaichi, the candidate of the right. Ishiba was the second choice of enough of his fellows to emerge as a narrow victor, by 215 votes to 194, but his base of support in the parliamentary party is small. Ishiba is likely to call a general election quickly. Victory will strengthen his position. But he will have to watch his back for internal rivals at least as carefully as he handles the official opposition.
On the economy, Ishiba has signalled he will stick for now to the policies of his predecessor, Fumio Kishida, which are still, in essence, the policies of Abe. That is sensible. Ishiba favours the continued normalisation of the Bank of Japan’s monetary policy, which is desirable, provided it is consistent with keeping inflation at the 2 per cent target.
In the past, however, he was a fierce opponent of Abe’s stimulus. He has talked about raising taxes on business. He is ardently in favour of economic revitalisation for regional Japan, although how he might achieve this is unclear. None of his rhetoric is obviously supportive of economic growth. The yen rose and stock futures fell on news of his victory.
During the leadership campaign, Ishiba talked about creating an Asian Nato, presumably to defend its members against China. Yet it is not clear who, other than Japan, would want to join. He is likely, at least, to maintain Japan’s improved relations with South Korea.
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Ishiba has often objected to the inequality of the US-Japan alliance, under which Washington protects Tokyo, but Japan is obliged to host US troops on its soil. It is an uneasy thought to imagine Ishiba — an earnest, serious man — discussing his desire to reshape the alliance with a mercenary, isolationist Donald Trump, should the latter regain the US presidency in a few weeks’ time.
After defeats in 2008, 2012, 2018 and 2020, Ishiba’s achievement of the premiership is a testament to the power of perseverance. His genuine personality and obvious respect for the voters give him public appeal. To succeed as the leader of a divided party, however, he will need to show a strong streak of pragmatism, at least for an initial phase, rather than pursue his own, long-held political projects.
A FLIGHT attendant has revealed the £1.50 item that is a game-changer when sitting next to smelly passengers.
Enduring a long-haul flight next to a smelly traveller is a nightmare for any passenger.
Susannah Carr, a flight attendant for a major US airline, advises wearing a mask if you find yourself in that unfortunate situation.
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She said: “Throw one of those disposable masks in your bag.
“Even if you’re not afraid of germs, that can be a barrier to one of those smells.”
Travellers can purchase disposable masks for just £1.50 from Nursecall Matts.
Alternatively, Boots is offering a pack of five for £2.99, reduced from its original price of £5.99.
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The seasoned flight attendant also suggested that applying a dab of Vicks VapoRub beneath your nose could be another effective solution.
Susannah claimed that this method is a common practice among crew members when they are assigned to collect rubbish.
She added that flight attendants regularly use essential oils such as peppermint to help shield themselves from odours in the cabin.
Vicks Vaporub can be bought on Amazon for just under £5.
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Travellers who would prefer to use essential oils can purchase the items from Superdrug starting at just £4.99.
Flight attendant reveals the REAL reason they always greet you when you’re getting on the plane, and it’s got nothing to do with being polite
It comes after a savvy flight attendant revealed the £1.20 item she always takes with her whenever she boards a plane.
TikTok star Destanie Armstrong has shared the clever way she avoids having to eat unappetising plane food by packing her own quick and easy snack which can be made onboard almost all planes.
The Philadelphia-based flight attendant has racked up 70,000 followers online for her tips and tricks on how to best prepare for a flight.
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With viewers being left amazed at her latest suggestion on how to keep your taste buds happy even when you’re up in the air.
The 25-year-old air stewardess says she would never board a plane hungry just in case you end up fancying food during the long haul journey.
But on the rare occasion where she forgets to fuel up her body or even on extra long flights, Destanie says she will always pack a handy snack.
She told her TikTok followers: “You can’t depend on these flights to have food and even if they do, a lot of the times the options aren’t food.”
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The seasoned flyer said she always packs two pots of noodles in her hand luggage.
Almost all planes have hot water onboard, according to Destanie, meaning it is a great option to have.
It is even more useful if you either don’t want to pay the high price for snacks or don’t feel like eating any of the food options available.
Most noodle pots cost around £1 meaning they are a great and cheap option.
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Family favourite brand Batchelors Super Noodles can be found in supermarkets for only £1 and come in a whole variety of flavours.
In its 2006 war with Hizbollah, Israel tried to kill Hassan Nasrallah three times.
One air strike missed — the leader of Hizbollah had earlier left the spot. The others failed to penetrate the concrete reinforcements of his underground bunker, according to two people familiar with the attempted assassinations.
On Friday night, the Israeli military fixed those mistakes. It tracked Nasrallah to a bunker built deep below an apartment complex in south Beirut, and dropped as many as 80 bombs to make sure he was killed, according to Israeli media.
“We will reach everyone, everywhere,” bragged the pilot of the F-15i warplane that the Israeli army said dropped the lethal payload, destroying at least four residential buildings.
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But the confident swagger of the Israeli military and security establishment, which has in the past few weeks delivered a steady drumbeat of devastating blows to one of its biggest regional rivals, belies an uncomfortable truth: in nearly four decades of battling Hizbollah, only recently has Israel truly turned the tide.
What changed, said current and former officials, is the depth and quality of the intelligence that Israel was able to lean on in the past two months, starting with the July 30 assassination of Fuad Shukr, one of Nasrallah’s right-hand men, as he visited a friend not far from Friday’s bombing site.
These officials described a large-scale reorientation of Israel’s intelligence-gathering efforts on Hizbollah after the surprising failure of its far more powerful military to deliver a knockout blow against the militant group in 2006, or even to eliminate its senior leadership, including Nasrallah.
For the next two decades, Israel’s sophisticated signals intelligence Unit 8200, and its military intelligence directorate, called Aman, mined vast amounts of data to map out the fast-growing militia in Israel’s “northern arena”.
Miri Eisin, a former senior intelligence officer, said that required a fundamental shift in how Israel viewed Hizbollah, a Lebanese guerrilla movement that had sapped Israel’s will and endurance in the quagmire of its 18 year-long occupation of south Lebanon. For Israel that ended in 2000 in an ignominious retreat, accompanied by a significant loss of intelligence gathering.
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Instead, Eisin said, Israeli intelligence widened its aperture to view the entirety of Hizbollah, looking beyond just its military wing to its political ambitions and growing connections with Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and Nasrallah’s relationship with Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad.
“You have to define, in that sense, exactly what you’re looking for,” she said. “That’s the biggest challenge, and if done well, it allows you to look at this in all its complexity, to look at the whole picture.”
Israeli intelligence had for nearly a decade referred to Hizbollah as a “terror army”, rather than as a terrorist group “like Osama bin Laden in a cave”, she said. It was a conceptual shift that forced Israel to study Hizbollah as closely and broadly as it had the Syrian army, for instance.
As Hizbollah grew in strength, including in 2012 deploying to Syria to help Assad quell an armed uprising against his dictatorship, it gave Israel the opportunity to take its measure. What emerged was a dense “intelligence picture” — who was in charge of Hizbollah’s operations, who was getting promoted, who was corrupt, and who had just returned from an unexplained trip.
While Hizbollah’s fighters were battle hardened in Syria’s bloody war, the militant group’s forces had grown to keep pace with the drawn-out conflict. That recruitment also left them more vulnerable to Israeli spies placing agents or looking for would-be defectors.
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“Syria was the beginning of the expansion of Hizbollah,” said Randa Slim, a programme director at the Middle East Institute in Washington. “That weakened their internal control mechanisms and opened the door for infiltration on a big level.”
The war in Syria also created a fountain of data, much of it publicly available for Israel’s spies — and their algorithms — to digest. Obituaries, in the form of the “Martyr Posters” regularly used by Hizbollah, were one of them, peppered with little nuggets of information, including which town the fighter was from, where he was killed, and his circle of friends posting the news on social media. Funerals were even more revealing, sometimes drawing senior leaders out of the shadows, even if briefly.
A former high-ranking Lebanese politician in Beirut said the penetration of Hizbollah by Israeli or US intelligence was “the price of their support for Assad”.
“They had to reveal themselves in Syria,” he said, where the secretive group suddenly had to stay in touch and share information with the notoriously corrupt Syrian intelligence service, or with Russian intelligence services, who were regularly monitored by the Americans.
“They went from being highly disciplined and purists to someone who [when defending Assad] let in a lot more people than they should have,” said Yezid Sayigh, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center. “The complacency and arrogance was accompanied by a shift in its membership — they started to become flabby.”
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That was a departure for a group that took pride in is ability to fend off Israel’s vaunted intelligence prowess in Lebanon. Hizbollah blew up Shin Bet’s headquarters in Tyre not once but twice in the early years of Israel’s occupation of southern Lebanon. At one point in the late 1990s, Israel realised that Hizbollah was hijacking its then-unencrypted drone broadcasts, learning about the Israel Defense Forces’ own targets and methods, according to two people familiar with the issue.
Israel’s broadened focus on Hizbollah in the region was accompanied by a growing, and eventually insurmountable technical advantage — spy satellites, sophisticated drones and cyber-hacking capabilities that turn mobile phones into listening devices.
It collects so much data that it has a dedicated group, Unit 9900, which writes algorithms that sift through terabytes of visual images to find the slightest changes, hoping to identify an improvised explosive device by a roadside, a vent over a tunnel or the sudden addition of a concrete reinforcement, hinting at a bunker.
Once a Hizbollah operative is identified, his daily patterns of movements are fed into a vast database of information, siphoned off from devices that could include his wife’s cell phone, his smart car’s odometer, or his location. These can be identified from sources as disparate as a drone flying overhead, from a hacked CCTV camera feed that he happens to pass by and even from his voice captured on the microphone of a modern TV’s remote control, according to several Israeli officials.
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Any break from that routine becomes an alert for an intelligence officer to sift through, a technique that allowed Israel to identify the mid-level commanders of the anti-tank squads of two or three fighters that have harassed IDF troops from across the border. At one point, Israel monitored the schedules of individual commanders to see if they had suddenly been recalled in anticipation of an attack, one of the officials said.
But each one of these processes required time and patience to develop. Over years, Israeli intelligence was able to populate such a vast target bank that in the first three days of its air campaign, its warplanes tried to take out at least 3,000 suspected Hizbollah targets, according to the IDF’s public statements.
“Israel had a lot of capabilities, a lot of intelligence stored waiting to be used,” said a former official. “We could have used these capabilities way longer ago during this war, but we didn’t.”
That patience appears to have paid off for the military. For more than 10 months, Israel and Hizbollah traded cross-border fire, while Israel killed a few hundred of Hizbollah’s low-level operatives, the vast majority of them within a slowly expanding theatre of the conflict, stretching a few kilometres north of the border.
That appears to have lulled Nasrallah into thinking that the two arch-rivals were involved in a new sort of brinkmanship, with well-defined red lines that could be managed until Israel agreed a ceasefire in Gaza with Hamas, allowing Hizbollah an “off-ramp” that would allow it to agree a ceasefire with Israel.
The group had only started this round of fire with Israel on October 8, in solidarity with Iran-backed Hamas, in an attempt to keep at least some Israeli firepower pinned down on its northern border.
“Hizbollah felt obliged to take part in the fight, but at the same time limited itself severely — there was never really any intention of them taking an initiative where they might have some advantage,” said Sayigh of the Carnegie Middle East Center.
“They seem to have thrown off a few rockets here and there, and taken a few hits in return, and getting lulled into a notion that this was the limit of it — they kept one, if not both, hands tied behind their back and did nothing approaching their own full capability.”
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But even the possibility that Hizbollah would attempt the same sort of cross-border raid that Hamas had successfully pulled off on October 7 — killing 1,200 people in southern Israel, and taking 250 hostages back into Gaza — was enough for Israel to evacuate the communities near its border with Lebanon. Some 60,000 Israelis were forced from their homes, turning the border into an active war zone with Hizbollah.
To create the conditions for their return, PM Benjamin Netanyahu appears to have unleashed Israel’s more advanced offensive capabilities, according to officials briefed on the operations.
That included the unprecedented detonation of thousands of booby-trapped pagers two weeks ago, wounding thousands of Hizbollah members with the very devices that they had thought would help them avoid Israel’s surveillance.
It culminated on Friday with Nasrallah’s assassination, a feat that Netanyahu’s predecessor, Ehud Olmert, had authorised in 2006 and the IDF had failed to deliver.
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In recent months, if not years, Israeli intelligence had nearly perfected a technique that allowed it to, at least intermittently, locate Nasrallah, who had been suspected of mostly been living underground in a warren of tunnels and bunkers.
In the days after October 7, Israeli warplanes took off with instructions to bomb a location where Nasrallah had been located by Israel’s intelligence directorate Aman. The raid was called off after the White House demanded Netanyahu do so, according to one of the Israeli officials.
On Friday, Israeli intelligence appears to have pinpointed his location again — heading into what the IDF called “a command and control” bunker, apparently to a meeting that included several senior Hizbollah leaders and a senior Iranian commander of Revolutionary Guards operations.
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In New York, Netanyahu was informed on the sidelines of his address at the UN General Assembly, where he rejected the notion of a ceasefire with Hizbollah and vowed to press on with Israel’s offensive. A person familiar with the events said that Netanyahu knew of the operation to kill Nasrallah before he delivered his speech.
Israel’s campaign is not over, says Netanyahu. It is still possible that Israel will send ground troops into southern Lebanon to help clear a buffer zone north of its border. Much of Hizbollah’s missile capabilities remain intact.
“Hizbollah did not disappear in the last 10 days — we’ve damaged and degraded them and they are in the stage of chaos and mourning,” said Eisin, the former senior intelligence officer. “But they still have lots of capabilities that are very threatening.”
The company has frozen the cost of second class stamps at 85p until 2029 in a bid to keep the sending of letters affordable.
Royal Mail says it has tried to keep price increases as low as possible in the face of declining letter volumes, and inflationary pressures.
When announcing the price rise earlier this month, it also cited the costs associated with maintaining the so-called Universal Service Obligation (USO) under which deliveries have to be made six days a week.
Ofcom, which has been consulting on the future of the universal postal service since January, said it should keep first class deliveries to six days a week.
Under the plans being considered, second class deliveries would not be made on Saturdays and would only be on alternate weekdays, but delivery times would remain unchanged at up to three working days.
Ofcom said no formal decision had been made and it continues to review the changes, with aims to publish a consultation in early 2025 and make a decision in the summer of next year.
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Royal Mail said letter volumes have fallen from 20billion in 2004/5 to around 6.7billion a year in 2023/4, so the average household now receives four letters a week, compared to 14 a decade ago.
eBay Parcel Surprise: Rare Stamps Galore!
The number of addresses Royal Mail must deliver to has risen by 4million in the same period meaning the cost of each delivery continues to rise.
Royal Mail said the universal service needs urgent reform, adding: “The minimum requirements of the universal service haven’t changed for over 20 years despite major changes to how people communicate.
“We have no certainty on regulatory reform and the rate of letter decline and ongoing losses means that Royal Mail has had to take the necessary steps within its power to address the very real and urgent financial sustainability challenge the universal service faces right now.
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Nick Landon, Royal Mail’s chief commercial officer, said it always considers price increases “very carefully”.
However, he said, as letter volumes have declined by two-thirds since their peak, the cost of delivering each letter has inevitably increased.
He added: “A complex and extensive network is needed to get every letter and parcel across the country for a single price – travelling on trucks, planes, ferries and in some cases drones before it reaches its final destination on foot. We are proud to deliver the universal service, but the financial cost is significant.
“The universal service must adapt to reflect changing customer preferences and increasing costs so that we can protect the one-price-goes anywhere service, now and in the future.”
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How are postage prices decided?
Royal Mail typically increases the price of stamps annually and this year the price rose in April.
Normally, it gives customers advance warning of around a month before pushing up prices.
It also cited the costs associated with maintaining the so-called Universal Service Obligation (USO) under which deliveries have to be made six days a week.
In its submission to Ofcom in April, it proposed ditching Saturday deliveries for second class post and cutting the service to every other weekday.
Lindsey Fussell, Ofcom’s group director for networks and communications, said: “If we decide to propose changes to the universal service next year, we want to make sure we achieve the best outcome for consumers.
“So we’re now looking at whether we can get the universal service back on an even keel in a way that meets people’s needs.
“But this won’t be a free pass for Royal Mail – under any scenario, it must invest in its network, become more efficient and improve its service levels.”
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Royal Mail owner International Distribution Services (IDS), which agreed to a £3.57billion takeover by Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky in May, said “change cannot come soon enough” to the UK’s postal service.
The business said the move would make letters more secure.
Anyone who still has these old-style stamps and uses them may have to pay a surcharge.
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How prices have changed
Royal Mail previously raised the price of first class stamps from £1.10 to £1.25 last October, before boosting them again in April.
Right now, a first class stamp costs £1.35, which covers the delivery of letters up to 100g.
Historically, the cost of stamps has seen a steady increase over the years, reflecting inflation and operational costs. For example, in 2000, a First Class stamp was priced at 41p.
A second class stamp is priced at 85p and also covers letters up to 100g.
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The stamps can be bought individually if you buy it at a Post Office counter.
Otherwise, you can typically buy them in sets of multiple stamps.
The first class service typically delivers the next working day, including Saturdays, while the second class service usually delivers within 2-3 working days, also including Saturdays.
For larger letters, the cost of a first class stamp is £2.20 for items up to 100g, and a second class stamp for the same weight is £1.55.
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Parcel delivery prices vary based on size and weight, starting from £3.69 for small parcels.
Additional services include the “signed for” option, which requires a signature upon delivery and adds an extra level of security.
The cost for first class signed for is £3.05, and for second class Signed for, it is £2.55.
The “special delivery” service guarantees next-day delivery by 1pm with compensation cover, with prices starting from £7.95.
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Royal Mail periodically reviews and adjusts stamp prices, so it is advisable to check the latest rates on their official website or at your local post office.
How stamp prices have risen over time
The cost of a book of stamps has risen gradually over the past few decades.
First class stamps were worth 60p in the early 2010s and are now priced at £1.35.
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Second class stamps were also worth 50p in the early 2010s but now sell for 85p.
First class stamps cost 95p at one point in 2023, before being hiked to £1.10 last April. They were then raised by 15p to £1.25 last October.
The latest hike on first class stamps to £1.65 in October means they will have risen by a staggering 43% since just last year.
How to beat the hike
Money guru Martin Lewis advised Brits to buy stamps in bulk before the new prices kick in to save a decent chunk of change for all their posting needs.
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He said: “For years, every time stamps go up in price I’ve suggested people stock up and bulk-buy in advance, as provided the stamp doesn’t have a price on it and instead just says the postage class, it’s still valid after the hike.
“So you may as well stock up now, even if it’s just for Christmas cards for the next few Christmases.”
Do bear in mind though, if you stock up on stamps now, be careful to avoid fakes, he said.
Buy from reputable high street outlets and, where possible, hang on to your receipt.
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Stamps are also available directly from the Royal Mail online shop, but you have to spend £50 to get free delivery.
Back in April, Royal Mail paused the £5 penalty for anyone who receives a letter with a fake stamp on it while it takes fresh action against counterfeits.
However, you could still be charged if you use a fake stamp when sending something.
To check whether a stamp is genuine, you can use Royal Mail’s new “fake stamp scanner” on the app.
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Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
For Felicity Aylieff, pots are the perfect form. “They may not be fashionable,” says the professor of ceramics and glass at the Royal College of Art, who has been teaching and practising for more than 40 years. “But they’re important — I love that you don’t have to explain a pot.”
The ceramicist’s mightiest works to date go on show in a major solo exhibition at Kew Gardens next month. Such is their scale and presence that visitors will quickly discover that Aylieff’s pots definitely do the talking. Aylieff’s intention, in part, is to overturn perceptions of porcelain as a fragile tabletop art. At Kew, she will be filling the Shirley Sherwood Gallery with 40 of her eye-catching forms. Seen en masse, this dynamic display places floral vases precision-painted with Fencai enamel alongside porcelain vessels expressively daubed in cobalt blue oxide. It promises to be spectacular.
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Standing guard outside on the lawn will be a colossal pair of painterly blue and white obelisks — one of which is her largest to date, measuring more than 17ft tall — taking Aylieff’s big pot energy to new heights. “I want to bring a sense of awe and excitement and wonder,” she says. “So people stop and think: ‘How on earth do you do that?’”
The answer lies thousands of miles away in the city of Jingdezhen. In 2005, the axes of Aylieff’s life shifted dramatically when she and her husband, the renowned Japanese potter Takeshi Yasuda, whom she met in the 1990s, began travelling to southeastern China. “It is said that people in Jingdezhen live and breathe porcelain — known as China’s ‘white gold’, so prized have its qualities been throughout history,” she says of the ancient porcelain capital, where production spans more than 1,700 years. The clay is imbued with an unsurpassed purity and robustness that has allowed Aylieff to explore her practice anew.
In Jingdezhen, she encountered a handful of family-run workshops, including the Xin Liang Big Pot Factory, which traditionally supplies large Buddhas and vessels for hotel lobbies and political venues in China. “I saw a chance to start making my work on a much larger scale,” she says. “I realised I could employ their specialist techniques, but using my own vocabulary.”
The process of observation proved transformative. Rather than replicate her earlier, more minimal aesthetic, the larger forms gave Aylieff a bigger, broader canvas for more experimental work. She began painting, in honour of China’s signature ceramics, in blue on to white using the kind of enormous horsehair brush usually reserved for calligraphy.
“I’m always curious,” she says of what the end result will be. “I never stay still with my work. It constantly changes along with my life.”
One of the principal joys of creating this show was exploring Kew’s archive of more than 200,000 botanical drawings and prints. “The sensitivity and clarity of these drawings appeals to me,” she says, carefully leafing through the early 19th-century depictions of Morning Glory, hibiscus, peony and tulips, which formed the starting point for her colourful Fencai pots. In contrast to the exuberance of the single-fired blue and white works, which are painted at speed, the Fencai are exacting in their finely wrought floral composition. “It’s more contemplative,” she says of their pixel-like dots. “The big blue and white pots are the show-offs.”
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During the three-year creative process, Aylieff has divided her time between China and her home just outside Bath (though until 2022 she lived in London, just across the water with a view of Kew). So established is Aylieff in Jingdezhen, she set up her own studio, Redhouse Ceramics together with Yasuda.
Despite the language barrier, Aylieff has carved deep roots. She calls her crew of co-creators her “big pot family” and compares pulling off her monumental vessels to scaling to the summit of a mountain. “People say how wonderful it is to have a solo show, but there’s a whole army behind it,” she says of the throwers, trimmers, glazers and kiln firers who help realise her vision. “I relish what you can do with more than one pair of hands.”
The scale of Aylieff’s practice reveals pottery at its most physical. It takes the Herculean strength of four throwers to produce the big ware — which is made in sections, before being assembled at full scale. “It’s like ballet,” says Aylieff of the theatrical orchestration, pulling up a video on her phone in which the lead thrower, his face contorted in concentration, pushes his arm determinedly into the wet clay. Such is the force of the vast wheel, it demands three further throwers to hold him in place. “I did once fall in,” admits Aylieff. “They loved it.”
Aylieff finds the instinctive act of painting these vast vessels, which requires ladders and scaffolds, demanding, but also exhilarating. Though self-assured and direct in person, she admits to being boldest in clay. “I do not want my work to be shy,” she says. Always ambitious, now at 70, she is fearlessly so.
“Hers is a big world,” says her gallerist Adrian Sassoon, who has placed her creations everywhere from private houses in the US and Australia, to Chatsworth and the Victoria and Albert Museum. But how does the big ware sit in a home? “There’s a beauty and poise to these objects. In the centre of a room they become these friendly personalities.”
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Israel launched dozens of fresh strikes in Lebanon on Sunday and vowed to keep up its offensive against Hizbollah after assassinating the militant group’s leader Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut.
People in Lebanon were braced for more attacks as the Israeli army issued fresh evacuation orders to civilians, including residents of south Beirut, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged that despite killing the influential Hizbollah leader, Israel’s “work has still not been completed”.
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Netanyahu said Israel would continue its fight against the Iran-backed militant group until it had succeeded in “changing the balance of power” in the Middle East and until about 60,000 residents of northern Israel, displaced by a year of cross-border fire, were able to return to their homes.
Israel’s military continued to target Hizbollah leaders, after killing Nasrallah in a massive strike on Friday in the southern Beirut suburb of Dahiyeh that the country’s defence minister hailed as “one of the most important assassinations in the history of the State of Israel”.
On Sunday, the Israel Defense Forces said they had killed Nabil Qaouk, a member of Hizbollah’s central council, who was sanctioned by the US in 2020 for his key role in the organisation.
Qaouk was believed to be in the running to replace Nasrallah after his death. The IDF said Qaouk was killed on Saturday, but did not say where. It said Qaouk was “directly involved in terrorist attacks against the State of Israel and its citizens, even in recent days”, adding that Israel would continue to target the top echelons of Hizbollah.
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Israel’s intense week-long bombing campaign has killed more than 1,000 people across Lebanon, according to the Lebanese health ministry. It has been some of the deadliest days for the country since Israel fought a 34-day war with Hizbollah in Lebanon in 2006.
At least four paramedics were killed on Sunday. The bombing levelled more homes in Lebanon’s eastern Bekaa Valley and southern provinces. Six bodies were pulled from beneath the rubble of a home in the village of al-Ain, Lebanese state news reported.
Since the large-scale Israeli air strikes began on Monday, hundreds of thousands of Lebanese civilians have been displaced, many fleeing to the already densely populated capital, sleeping in schools, on beaches and in the streets.
On Saturday, the IDF claimed to have killed Hassan Khalil Yassin, describing him as a top member of Hizbollah’s intelligence department responsible for selecting targets in Israel.
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Lebanon’s Prime Minister Najib Mikati declared three days of official mourning following Nasrallah’s death. He said all public and private institutions would stop work on the day of Nasrallah’s funeral.
After Nasrallah’s death, US President Joe Biden said “the United States fully supports Israel’s right to defend itself against Hizbollah, Hamas, the Houthis, and any other Iranian-supported terrorist groups”, but added that Washington hoped to de-escalate the conflict “through diplomatic means”.
Israel has raised the prospect of a ground offensive into southern Lebanon, where Hizbollah has a network of weapons stores and bases.
Late on Saturday, Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant issued a statement saying he was making “an operational situation assessment regarding the expansion of IDF activities in the northern arena”, where Israel has previously mobilised at least two brigades. He did not say what that expansion could entail.
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Hizbollah and other members of the so-called axis of resistance, led by Iran, continued to fire on Israel overnight. Most rockets were intercepted or landed in open areas.
Sirens sounded across northern Israel as dozens of rockets were fired from Lebanon, and were also triggered in central Israel. A rocket landed in an open area near the Israeli settlement of Mitzpe Hagit in the occupied West Bank, starting a fire.
The IDF said an Israeli warship intercepted a drone approaching Israel from the Red Sea on Saturday, triggering alarms in the southern resort and port city of Eilat. The Islamic Resistance in Iraq claimed responsibility for the attempted attack.
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