Potters & Sculptors - Making Rock from Mud
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i"d like to make a comment about melting glass onto glazes. i have been doing it for over 15 years. i began by recycling beer and wine bottles, noxema bottles (now you can tell how long ago that was-pre blue plastic), etc. but i had a lot of trouble with cracking, crazing and poor fit. you see, the coef of expansion of these different glasesgot me into trouble. for a an easier and surer way to get glass all of the same coef, but glass frit. i know the same word but here in glassland the frit is ground glass. buy different colors but all of the same coe. i use bullseye and get buy small amounts and test, test, test. you can get some beautiful combos and sosme real losers. i have never yet gotten the red to come thru a glaze fire. and i remember while visiting in puerto rico finding lots of broken red glass (imagine that) tail lights and packing a suitcase with them. then finding out that the color fades. so if you want to go further with glass melting remember to get all of the same coe
eleanor
Hi Suzanne ..Thank YOu! I do a bisque fire...then a cone 6 glaze firing with the glass in the wet glaze
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These are beautiful! Do you add the glass and fire to cone 6 or do you do an additional firing at a lower temperature?
Thanks for sharing!
I appreciate very much you sharing what you have learned Catherine and love the work in your photo. I look forward to seeing them glazed. Thanks for the tip on glazing the inside and outside on separate days. When you mentioned using broken pieces of glass, it makes me think of the little treasures/tumbled glass that you can find on the beach sometimes. I now have a use for them and it will mean something special if i incorporate them into my pottery. My kiln has been broken for a month. I found this site and started to make the wonderful glazes shared on this site, so it is has been torture that i cannot fire anything. I am hoping to get it fixed next week and look forward to start with my glaze experiments. I have a 14 month old so have been out in my studio when i get the opportunity (mostly at night when she is sleeping), making things ready to glaze. I will take some pics when i get a chance of some of the things i am yet to glaze. I also do love raku so make pieces appr for that. I also plan to make a raku kiln and a soda kiln in the near future(have had experience making kilns in the past). I have been doing raku in my electric kiln up to now but is not ideal.
Jan, All of my glazes are commercial..I gave up mixing my own a while ago. Lack of time with teaching full time..I chose to focus on my forms. There are so many commercial glazes on the market,my experimentation is with combinations and applications.Minnesota clay and Great lakes clay offer some great choices. Also at the NCECA this year I purchased some new Ash glazes on the market...I'll let you know how they work.
I spray 4-8 layers of glazes on much of my work..my interest lies in the interaction..crackles,ash..matt..celedons I love to experiment! The insides of my pieces are poured..they are then left to dry over night. if you glaze both sides the moisture forces the glazes to crack off.The rest is sprayed ,splashed ,painted whatever the piece calls for. Often times on the large platters glass is places in the wet glazes. Currently I am experimenting with rolling wet clay into glass...cant wait to see what happens.
In the pic below the shells have been rolled and then slipped to the darker body..I want a raw feeling with bits of random glaze,,hoping this works.
Low cost flat lapping disc can be used on you potters wheel if you, drill bat pin holes in it, and provide a trickle of water to cool it. At amazon.com, 120 grit for aggressive material removal. Click the image to purchase
Members have had great things to say about John Britt's new book, Mid-Range Glazes. Click the image to buy from Amazon.com
Purchase Glazes Cone 6 by Michael Bailey, The Potters Book of Glaze Recipes by Emmanuel Cooper, or Making Marks by Robin Hopper, all available at amazon.com. Mastering Cone 6 Glazes by John Hesselberth & Ron Roy is now out of print.
Harbor Freight is a great place to find unbeatable prices for better HVLP spray guns with stainless steel parts and serviceable economy models, as well as detail guns, all tested by our members for spraying glazes, as well as compressors to power the guns. As yet no one has tested and commented on the remarkably inexpensive air brushes at harbor freight.
The critter siphon gun is a spray alternative that is well liked by some of our members, and is available at amazon.
Amazon is also a competitive source for photo light tents for shooting professional quality pictures of your work. They also have the EZ Cube brand favored by several of our members. You might also want to purchase the book Photographing Arts, Crafts and Collectibles . . .
If you are up to creating videos of your work or techniques you might want to invest in a flip video camera
Following are a few scales useful for potters. Ohaus Triple Pro Mechanical Triple Beam Balance, 2610g x 0.1g, with Tare $169.00
And finally a low cost clone of the OHaus. The Adam Equipment TBB2610T Triple Beam Mechanical Balance With Tare Beam $99.62
ebay is a great alternative for many tools and the equipment used in the ceramics studio - kilns, wheels, extruders, slab rollers are often listed there both new and used.
If you just want to spout off, it is best accomplished as a blog posting. If you want to get more guidance and ideas from other members, ask a question as a new discussion topic. In the upper right corner of the lists for both types of posting, you will find an "+Add " button. Clicking it will open an editor where you create your posting. 4/16/2014
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