The Deichmanns spent a year in Europe, where Kjeld apprenticed as a potter with Axel Brüel, helping him to build a kiln, and Erica studied weaving. On their return to New Brunswick they set up a pottery studio at their home, which they called Dykelands because of the presence of several small
dykes on their property. Kjeld built a wood-burning kiln in which they made their first firing in 1935. The Deichmanns were largely self-taught and perfected their production methods through constant experimentation regarding kiln design, clay composition, and
glazes. Erica was responsible for inventing the glazes, of which she made over 5,000 experimental mixtures during her career as a potter. She also decorated the pottery, usually painting on the raw clay before the work was fired in the kiln, and hand-modelled fanciful miniature animal forms which she called "goofi". In 1956 the Deichmanns moved their pottery studio to Sussex, New Brunswick. Kjeld Deichmann died suddenly in June 1963. Erica closed the studio after her husband's death and stopped making pottery. ==Later life==