Cone 10 Glazes Sally Brogden, University of Tennessee, April 2010

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Cone 10 Glazes Sally Brogden, University of Tennessee, April 2010 Cone 10 Glazes Sally Brogden, University of Tennessee, April 2010 UNDER GLAZE WASHES Frank Martin Rust Orange Rutile 17 Red Iron Oxide 17 Gerstley Borate 17 E.P.K. 13 Illmenite 38 Medium Teal Green Cobalt Carbonate 20 Rutile 50 Chrome Oxide 20 Gerstley Borate 20 Gray Blue Cobalt Carbonate 60 Manganese Dioxide 20 Gerstley Borate 20 Red / Mauve Nepheline Syenite 55 Whiting 22 Flint 17 Tin oxide 3 Black copper oxide 2 Bentonite 2 Sally’s Favorite CONE 10 Oxidation Celedon #9 Wash Barium carb 6 Iron Oxide 10 Dolomite 3 Manganese dioxide powder 60 Lith carb 2 Cobalt carb 10 Whiting 13 EPK 20 Custer 21 Gun metal / slight variation in Ox or R Petalite 21 EPK 15 Flint 18 Ayumi's Satin Matt Soda Ash 3.6 Also add: Iron 2 - green R Dolomite 11 Manganese 3 - green R Whiting 5.5 Copper 2 / rutile 4 - Kona F4 Feldspar 36.4 Copper 1 / rutile 3 - EPK 18 Gloss transparent Strontium carb 20 Flint 5.5 Base 8 Also add: copper carb 1 - turquoise Frit 3110 40 Satin matt Lith carb 4 Barium carb 6 Flint 25 Lorios EPK 15 Custer 50 Whiting 34 Also add: copper carb 1 EPK 16 Chrome .5 Crimson stain Manganese 2 - Gloss transparent Copper carbonate 2 - Nickel 1 - Steve's Base #21 Kona F4 40 Whiting 10 Dolomite 15 Magnesium carb 10 EPK 15 Flint 10 Also add: manganese dioxide 1 / cobalt carb .25 copper 2 / cobalt .25 copper 2 copper 2 / rutile 4 Mark Issenberg’s Ash Glaze recipes: Satin Matt http://lookoutmountainpottery.com/ Wes Smith’s favorite Copper Red Glazes. Cone 10 Soda spar encourages red orange and potash encourages red purple blue etc. Hillary Red cone 10 R Feldspar 2125 Flint 1330 Whiting 140 Dolomite 440 Strontium 440 Bent. 90 Tin 135 Zinc 90 Copper Carb. 20 Jeff’s Red cone 9-11 R Barium 4.36 Dolomite 8.72 Gerstley 8.72 Whiting 8.42 Zinc 7.72 Custer 41.89 Flint 26.17 Tin Ox. 2.64 Copper carb 0.51 Bent. 2.03 Splotchy Lavender cone 9-11 Calcined Zinc ox 3.88 Lithium 1.94 Strontium 1.55 Whiting 13.57 Custer 48.46 Frit 3134 4.24 Bent. 0.97 EPK 2.13 Flint 23.26 Tin ox 0.97 Copper 0.58 Have fun with'em. The Jeffʼs red and Lavender are fun to try color runs on. Wes Sally’s #9 Black Wash Cone 10 Red Iron Ox 10 Manganese Diox P 60 Cobalt Carb 10 EPK 20 Frazier Celedon Cone 10R G200 Feldspar 34 Wollastonite 27 Flint 21 Grolleg 15 Talc 3 Red Iron Oxide ½ Base 8 Cone 10 Ox Ferro Fritt # 3110 40 Lithium Carb 4 Barium Crab 6 Flint 25 EPK 15 Copper 1 – turq Chrome ½ - chartreuse Crimson stain maroon Lorio’s Cone 10 Ox/R Custer Feldspasr 50 Whiting 34 EPK 16 Bentonite 2 Mnaganese diox 2 - purple Copper carb 2 – turq Nickel 1 – pink / ox Anderson Ranch Slips salt / soda / reduction / wood Titanium Slip Nepheline Syenite 31.58 OM4 Ball 63.16 Flint 5.26 Superpax 5.26 Titanium 7 Yellow Slip Grolleg 30 Tile 6 40 Custer 30 Titanium diox 15 Flashing Slip for Bisque Soda Ash 2 Nepheline Syenite 25 EPK 75 Flashing Slip for Greenware Nepheline Syenite 10 Avery 80 XX Sagger 10 UT CONE 10 GlAZES Revised Spring 2007 Shino Ohata Khaki Nepheline Syenite 40 Custer Feldspar 49 Kona F-4 10 E.P.K. Kaolin 6 Spodumene 30 Whiting 7 Soda ash 10 Talc 6 Ball clay 20 Flint 22 Bone Ash 10 Red Iron Oxide 10 Sworoff White Matt Bentonite 2.00 Cornwall Stone 20 Epsom salts 0.25 Kona F4 26 Whiting 9 Dolomite 10 Reitz Purple Matte Talc 6 E.P.K. Kaolin 25 Glomax /Calcined kaolin 15 Whiting 5 Flint 8 Dolomite 20 Bentonite 2.00 Cornwall Stone 50 Epsom salts 0.25 Cobalt Carbonate .5 Bentonite 2.00 Oil Spot Black Matt Custer feldspar 62 Glossy White Whiting 5 Custer Feldspar 35.9 EPK 5 E.P.K. 11.4 Flint 16 Flint 22.8 Bentonite 3 Whiting 19.8 *Spanish Red iron oxide 7 Zircopax 9.5 Cobalt carbonate 2 Bentonite 2.00 Epsom salts 0.25 Epsom salts 0.25 Oribe Green Shaner / Babs FM’s Revised Hensley Custer feldspar 29 Colemanite 12 Flint 30 Kona F4 40 Whiting 19.5 Whiting 9 Talc 5.7 Barium Carbonate 4 EPK 7.5 Talc .9 Strontium carbonate 4.6 E.P.K. 3.2 Bone ash 1.5 Flint 29 Copper carbonate 6 Bone Ash 1.1 Bentonite 2 Bentonite 2.00 Epsom salts 0.25 Epsom salts 0.25 3D Yellow Matt Amber Celadon Gloss Nepheline Syenite 64 Alberta slip 31 Dolomite 21 Wollastonite 12 Zircopax 16 Custer feldspar 19 Ball Clay 4 Whiting 7 Red Iron Oxide 1 Gerstley borate 3 Bentonite 2.00 EPK 3 Epsom salts 0.25 Flint 13 Yellow Ocher 7 Bentonite 6 Temmoku Custer Feldspar 50 Whiting 20 E.P.K. 10 Davids ALBANY Substitute Flint 20 Redart 72 Red Iron Oxide 8.5 Whiting 10 Bentonite 2.00 Kona F-4 8 Epsom salts 0.25 Talc 5 EPK 5 Matt Turquoise Revised UT Shop Turq.(Base #4) Nepheline Syenite 45.0 Strontium carbonate 26.0 Kentucky OM #4 13.0 Silica 8.0 Copper carbonate 2.0 Rutile 3.0 Bentonite 3.0 Epsom salts 0.25 .
Recommended publications
  • Medieval Pottery from Romsey: an Overview
    Proc. Hampshire Field Club Archaeol. Soc. 67 (pt. II), 2012, 323–346 (Hampshire Studies 2012) MEDIEVAL POTTERY FROM ROMSEY: AN OVERVIEW By BEN JERVIS ABSTRACT is evidence of both prehistoric and Roman occupation, but this paper will deal only with This paper summarises the medieval pottery recovered the medieval archaeology, from the mid-Saxon from excavations undertaken by Test Valley Archae- period to the 16th century. ological Trust in Romsey, Hampshire from the Several excavations took place between the 1970’s–1990’s. A brief synthesis of the archaeology of 1970’s–90’s in the precinct of Romsey Abbey Romsey is presented followed by a dated catalogue of (see Scott 1996). It has been suggested on the pottery types identified, including discussions of the basis of historical evidence and a series fabric, form and wider affinities. The paper concludes of excavated, early, graves that the late Saxon with discussions of the supply of pottery to Romsey in abbey was built on the site of an existing eccle- the medieval period and also considers ceramic use siastical establishment, possibly a minster in the town. church (Collier 1990, 45; Scott 1996, 7). The foundation of the nunnery itself can be dated to the 10th century (Scott 1996, 158), but it INTRODUCTION was evacuated in AD 1001, due to the threat of Danish attack, being re-founded later in The small town of Romsey has been the focus the 11th century. The abbey expanded during of much archaeological excavation over the last the Norman period, with the building of the 30–40 years, but very little has been published choir and nave (Scott 1996, 7).
    [Show full text]
  • Colonial Archaeology: 070 333 Spring 2006 Prof C. Schrire Room 201
    Colonial Archaeology: 070 333 Spring 2006 Prof C. Schrire [email protected] Room 201/202 RAB Phone: 932 9006 Course Outline: This course will teach the rudiments of identification and analysis of colonial artifacts dating from about 1600-1900 AD. Our teaching collection includes a variety of ceramics, pipes, glass and small finds. The course if taught largely by supervision and not lectures. Students will sort collections, draw objects, measure objects and identify them according to numerous criteria. Course Requirements: A prerequisite for this course is 070: 208, Survey of Historical Archaeology, normally taught in the Fall term. Students for whom this requirement was waived are expected to study a suitable textbook on the subject, such as Orser, C. 1995 Historical Archaeology and Deetz, J In small things forgotten. Students will attend one three hour class, once a week. During this time they will handle material, analyze it, and draw objects. Each student will need a clean writing pad or notebook, a pad of graph paper, pencils, colored pencils, eraser, a ruler, and a divider. There will be two exams, a midterm and final. Useful Texts: 1. Noel-Hume, I. 2001. The Artifacts of Colonial America 2. Fournier, Robert. Illustrated Dictionary of Practical Pottery. Paperback, 4th ed. 2000 Radnor Pa. Available at Amazon.com ($31.96) 3. Numerous additional sources will be present at class for used during the practicals. Colonial Archaeology: 070 330 Significant technical terms: (see Fournier 2000) Absorption: The taking up of liquid into the pores of a pot. The water absorption of a ceramic is an indicator of its degree of vitrification.
    [Show full text]
  • Nonsuch Palace
    MARTIN BIDDLE who excavated Nonsuch ONSUCH, ‘this which no equal has and its Banqueting House while still an N in Art or Fame’, was built by Henry undergraduate at Pembroke College, * Palace Nonsuch * VIII to celebrate the birth in 1537 of Cambridge, is now Emeritus Professor of Prince Edward, the longed-for heir to the Medieval Archaeology at Oxford and an English throne. Nine hundred feet of the Emeritus Fellow of Hertford College. His external walls of the palace were excavations and other investigations, all NONSUCH PALACE decorated in stucco with scenes from with his wife, the Danish archaeologist classical mythology and history, the Birthe Kjølbye-Biddle, include Winchester Gods and Goddesses, the Labours of (1961–71), the Anglo-Saxon church and Hercules, the Arts and Virtues, the Viking winter camp at Repton in The Material Culture heads of many of the Roman emperors, Derbyshire (1974–93), St Albans Abbey and Henry VIII himself looking on with and Cathedral Church (1978, 1982–4, the young Edward by his side. The 1991, 1994–5), the Tomb of Christ in of a Noble Restoration Household largest scheme of political propaganda the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (since ever created for the English crown, the 1989), and the Church on the Point at stuccoes were a mirror to show Edward Qasr Ibrim in Nubia (1989 and later). He the virtues and duties of a prince. is a Fellow of the British Academy. Edward visited Nonsuch only once as king and Mary sold it to the Earl of Martin Biddle Arundel. Nonsuch returned to the crown in 1592 and remained a royal house until 1670 when Charles II gave the palace and its park to his former mistress, Barbara Palmer, Duchess of Cleveland.
    [Show full text]
  • The Earliest High-Fired Glazed Ceramics in China: the Composition of the Proto-Porcelain from Zhejiang During the Shang and Zhou Periods (C
    *Manuscript Click here to view linked References The earliest high-fired glazed ceramics in China: the composition of the proto-porcelain from Zhejiang during the Shang and Zhou periods (c. 1700 – 221 BC) Min Yina,*, Thilo Rehrena,§ and Jianming Zhengb a UCL Institute of Archaeology, 31-34 Gordon Square, London, WC1H 0PY, UK b Zhejiang Provincial Institute of Archaeology, Hangzhou, 310014, China * Corresponding author § New address: UCL-Q, Doha, Qatar Postal Address: UCL Institute of Archaeology, 31-34 Gordon Square, London, WC1H 0PY, UK Email address: [email protected] Abstract Bodies and glazes of 54 proto-porcelain sherds and 18 non proto-porcelain samples from Shang and Zhou periods production sites in Deqing, Zhejiang province were analysed by EPMA-WDS. The results indicate that the bodies of all samples were made from local raw material – porcelain stone, with the proto-porcelain samples being made from clay of higher quality. Wood ashes, high in lime and low in potash, were intentionally applied to the proto-porcelain samples, resulting in the formation of lime-rich glazes whose composition were determined by a temperature-controlled mechanism. In contrast, kiln fragments and furniture show a potash-rich fuel vapour glaze, which formed unintentionally during use of the kiln. The firing temperature for most of the proto-porcelain glazes is around the maturing temperature for typical more recent lime glazes, showing that the potters were already at such an early time able to attain sufficiently high temperature in their kilns. Keywords proto-porcelain, Shang and Zhou periods, Zhejiang, China, porcelain stone, glazing technique, firing temperature 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Ash Glazes, Local Slip Glazes and Once Fire Process Howard Skinner
    Rochester Institute of Technology RIT Scholar Works Theses Thesis/Dissertation Collections 6-1-1976 Ash glazes, local slip glazes and once fire process Howard Skinner Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.rit.edu/theses Recommended Citation Skinner, Howard, "Ash glazes, local slip glazes and once fire process" (1976). Thesis. Rochester Institute of Technology. Accessed from This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Thesis/Dissertation Collections at RIT Scholar Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses by an authorized administrator of RIT Scholar Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ASH GLAZES, LOCAL SLIP GLAZES and ONCE FIRE PROCESS BY Howard Skinner Technology- B.F.A. Rochester Institute of June, 1976 Preface My reasons for writing this thesis is to present my findings which have resulted from my explorations into the development of ash glazes, local slip glazes, once fire techniques and the production of an oriented ash glaze surface which will be consistent enough to be used on a steady line of functional dinnerware and accessories. Investigation into these areas was stismlated by a striving to join myself with the closeness of ash and natural clay glazes to the relation of the clay-forming process itself. Also the investigation has led toward the development of the once fire method which has resulted in great savings economically, time-wise, and ecologically. This once fire process joins the raw clay and slip clay ash glaze without taking away the fresh raw quality of the clay by being fired from raw clay to finished product in a one step process.
    [Show full text]
  • November/December 2019
    November/December 2019 Magazine 2 019 GOLD BOOK Tile Industry Resource Guide www.tile-magazine.com THE GO-TO GROUT FOR RELIABILITY, VERSATILITY AND PROVEN RESULTS. The ultimate performance cement grout. I Uniform consistent color I No efflorescence I Stain resistant I Lightweight for superior handling Available at The Home Depot I Ideal for all grout joint sizes up to 1/2" and tile distributors nationwide. CustomBuildingProducts.com DOWNLOAD CUSTOM’S MOBILE APP 800-272-8786 November/December 2019 Vol. 16, No. 8 www.tile-magazine.com Magazine Features 11 Contractor Spotlight 12 Technical Focus: Flatness tolerances, self-leveling underlayments and radiant uncoupling mats 16 Technical Focus: Moving beyond the traditional tile backer board 18 The international platform for tile 24 Total Solutions Plus celebrates 10 years 12 Gold Book: 2019 Tile Industry Resource Guide 30 Manufacturers by Products 38 Manufacturers 47 Distributors 53 Associations & Trade Shows Departments 6 Editorial 8 Industry News 28 Featured Product 28 Calendar 54 Ad Index 18 November/December 2019 On the cover: The all-new Chapter 7, Cubist™ collection from Jeffrey Court, Inc. features more than 35 new product offerings. Commonly known Magazine for its use of two-dimensional parts that come 2 019 together to create a larger perception of depth GOLD BOOK Tile Industry Resource Guide through the use of perspective, the new collection features 18 stone mosaics, three fi eld tiles and corresponding fi nishing pieces. The natural stones available in this collection are honed and polished Thassos, Nero Marquina and Bardiglio marble, offered in a 2- x 4-inch mosaic called Abstract, a parquet-inspired mosaic called Avant, and an overlapping hexagon design named Carve.
    [Show full text]
  • Cone 6 Glaze Recipes 15Tried & True
    ceramic artsdaily.org 15 tried & true cone 6 glaze recipes recipes and testing procedures for our favorite mid-range pottery glazes Contents 15 Tried & True Low Fire Glaze Recipes Good news cone 6 potters! We’ve gathered some of our favorite cone 6 glaze recipes in a convenient recipe-card format, perfect for printing and taking to the pottery studio. If you are interested in building a collection of beautiful cone 6 pottery glazes, you’ve found the perfect resource. If you’ve been low firing and would like to turn up the heat a bit, here’s a great as- sortment of cone 6 glaze recipes to start with. Or if you have grown bored with your current glazes, try out a few of these. And remember, as with all things ceramic: results may vary! Use the beautiful images here as a guide to the surfaces you’ll get, but be sure to always start out with small batches and have fun testing and tweaking. Now get out there and mix up some new pottery glazes. How to Test Cone 6 Glaze Recipes for Color Response and Surface Texture by Yoko Sekino-Bové A great place to start experimenting is with these five great recipes, from glossy to matte, which have already been tested and are presented in chart form. Blue Green/Copper Red Glaze Cone 6 oxidation or reduction From Rick Malmgren, Ceramics Monthly, October 2000 Wright’s Water Blue Glaze Cone 6 oxidation or reduction From David Wright, Ceramics Monthly, April 1998 Basic Bronze Cone 6 oxidation From A.
    [Show full text]
  • Wood Kiln Firing Techniques & Tips
    Tumblestacking and Train Kiln Plans by Judith Duff fter a few years of gas firing and intense glazing, ter Owen Rye. I loved the ash-covered, reduction- I was drawn to the warm and tactile look of cooled pots from the train kiln and decided that was pots fired in atmospheric firings. On several oc- what I wanted to build. Neely had designed the kiln casions, I visited the Sackler and Freer Galleries after a Japanese model. The result was pots covered A in ash, with beautiful flashings of color. I had found in Washington, D.C., and arranged an appointment to see the Asian pots in their private collection. The early Japa- my new direction! nese wood-fired pots of the third and fourth centuries in- My husband and I built the train kiln by counting trigued me. That is when they first began firing stoneware bricks on slides taken of the Utah kiln. After my kiln clays to high temperatures in hillside anagama kilns. This resulted in rudimentary glazes, formed when the wood ash ceramic arts adhered to the surface of the pots. I loved the effect and ceramic artsdaily.org knew that I wanted to pursue it. In 1997, I attended a three-week wood-firing workshop at Utah State UniversityHai with Kaburi John Neely and Australian pot- Creating Consistent Crusty Wood-Fire Results woodby Leewood Middleman kilnkiln firingfiring atsumiya Ryoji, a master potter living in Aomori prefecture, Japan, has devel- oped a unique wood-fire kiln to consis- Mtently create ceramic pieces with a very crusty ash surface.
    [Show full text]
  • Ash Glazes and the Effect of Colorants And
    ASH GLAZES AND THE EFFECT OF COLORANTS AND FIRING CONDITIONS APPROVED: Major Processor Minor Professor Director of t' nent of Art Dean of the Graduate School ASH GLAZES AND THE EFFECT OF COLORANTS AND FIRING CONDITIONS Volume I Text THESIS Presented to the Graduate Council of the North Texas State University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS By James Denny Jones, B. A, Denton, Texas June, 1969 TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME I Page LIST OF TABLES ix LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS X Chapter I. INTRODUCTION 1 The Problem and Its Purpose Experimental Plan Definitions Conclusion II. PROCEDURE 9 Tri-Axial Blend Mixtures Formulation of Compounds Excluding Color Satisfactory Glazes with Colorants Added Summary III. TESTING RESULTS 19 Base Glazes in Reduction Firing Base Glazes in Oxidation Firing Base Glazes with Colorants Added Classification of Glazes IV. SUMMARY, CONCLUSIONS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS ... 41 BIBLIOGRAPHY ......... 46 iii LIST OF PLATES VOLUME II Plate I. GLAZE 43 IN OXIDATION AND REDUCTION FIRING EXCLUD- ING COLORANTS Glaze 43 Using Mesquite in Oxidation Firing Glaze 43 Using Mesquite in Reduction Firing Glaze 43 Using Hackberry in Oxidation Firing Glaze 43 Using Hackberry in Reduction Firing II. GLAZE 43 USING HACKBERRY IN OXIDATION FIRING WITH COLORANTS ADDED Glaze 43 Using Hackberry in Oxidation Firing with 5% Red Iron Oxide Glaze 43 Using Hackberry in Oxidation Firing with 1% Copper Carbonate Glaze 43 Using Hackberry in Oxidation Firing with %% Cobalt Carbonate Glaze 43 Using Hackberry in Oxidation Firing with 5% Vanadium Stain Glaze 43 Using Hackberry in Oxidation Firing with 2% Manganese Dioxide III.
    [Show full text]
  • Early 19Th to Mid-20Th Century Ceramics in Texas
    Early 19th to Mid 20th Century Ceramics in Texas Becky Shelton, TASN Training Fort Worth, July 18th 2015 Adapted from: Sandra and Johnney Pollan and John Clark Texas Archeological Stewardship Network 2006 Workshop Presentations Ceramics generally fall into two categories: High temperatures Low temperatures Vitreous Nonvitreous 1. Stoneware Earthenware 2. Porcelain 1. Creamware 2. Pearlware 3. Whiteware 4. Red earthenware OET Porcelain Compact and grainy in cross-section with glassy edges. Used all decorating techniques to make decorative as well as useful wares. England developed two kinds of porcelain – hard-paste and soft-paste. Soft-paste porcelain is fritted with crushed glass. Bone China, or bone ash porcelain (fritted with glass and animal bone ash), became the standard English porcelain body throughout the 19th Century. It is more translucent than hard-paste porcelain. Its broken edges will discolor, and the overglaze decoration often wears away with use. Soft-paste porcelain: very Bone China: ivory, white, vitreous vitreous Earthenware • Fired at low temperatures • Coarse, porous clay bodies • Non-vitreous; require interior surface coating to prevent leakage • Opaque body; transmits no light • Includes “red wares, yellow wares, and white wares” Earthenware-Red • Coarse, porous body that is fragile and must be glazed to prevent leakage. • Pinkish buff to red to brown body • Wheel-thrown and drape-molded most common • Pre-1830: bulbous, ovoid shapes • Post-1830: Straight-sided cylindrical vessels • Decor: Slip-trailing, Manganese glaze, and simple Lead glaze Earthenware-Red, cont. Tooling marks Manganese glaze mostly pre-1850 Slip-trailed and coggled pie plate Milk pan with simple interior glaze Majolica - Early 20th Century Earthenware - Yellow • Coarse, porous body that is finer and more durable than redware, but less vitreous than stoneware.
    [Show full text]
  • Electric Kiln Firing Techniques & Tips
    ceramic artsdaily.org electric kiln firing techniques & tips inspiration, instruction and glaze recipes for electric ceramic kilns www.ceramicartsdaily.org | Copyright © 2009, Ceramic Publications Company | Electric Kiln Firing Techniques & Tips | i Electric Kiln Firing Techniques and Tips Inspiration, Instruction and Glaze Recipes for Electric Ceramic Kilns Electric kiln firing is one of the most common firing methods because electric kilns are readily available and simple to install, but that doesn’t mean that electric firing yields common results. Electric kilns can be incredible tools in the pottery studio. In this collection of articles, you will see how creative potters and ceramic artists are using electric kilns to create exquisite ceramic art. Not only can electric kilns produce great results, but they also offer control and dependability. And electric kilns keep be- coming more versatile, economical and easy to use with advances in controllers, energy efficiency, materials and safety. Here, you’ll learn ways to improve your electric firing results and be ready to take advantage of the incredible potential electric kilns have to offer. Electric Kiln Success by Jonathan Kaplan Jonathan Kaplan explains how layering and combining cone 6 glazes and using a controlled cooling cycle can create some exciting surfaces in a electric firing. Satori Yamaoka’s Electric and Propane Combination Firing by Bob McWilliams Learn how Satori Yamaoka combines both oxidation and slight reduction to create amazing oil-spot surfaces in his innovative electric and propane kiln. Plus he shares his kiln diagrams and glaze recipes. Wood Ash Glazing in an Electric Kiln By Harry Spring Potter Harry Spring shares his cone 6 wood-ash glaze recipes and explains how has come to appreciate the convenience of electronically controlled kilns.
    [Show full text]
  • Clay Times Back Issue Index • Updated February 2008
    Clay Times Back Issue Index • Updated February 2008 A "A Ben Waterman Project: Reckoning of Mile", Drop City Gallery (Seattle WA), exhibition dates, 2008 Jan/Feb:17 "A Simple Handbuilt Basket" (Bill van Gilder), 2007 Nov/Dec:29-32 "A Taste of the Fire: Hints for Attending a Wood Firing Workshop" (Judi Munn), 2008 Jan/Feb:43-47 "A Tiny Studio and a Tall Extruder" (David Hendley), 2007 Nov/Dec:64 "A Twist on Tradition" exhibition . Virginia Artisans Center (Waynesboro VA) . call for entries, 2007 Jan/Feb:16 "A Women's Clay Project in Thailand: Building A Banana Leaf Kiln" (Barbara J. Allen), 2007 May/Jun:42-45 Aaron, John photo of, 2002 Nov/Dec:13, 2003 Jan/Feb:45 works photos, 2002 Jul/Aug:40, 2003 Jan/Feb:45 Aaron Lee Benson's Terra Sigillata Substitute (recipe), 1998 Nov/Dec:44 Aarons, James, works photos, 2002 Sep/Oct:41 Abel, Marianne, "Johnny Rolf: A Retrospective", 1997 Jan/Feb:32-34 Aberystwyth Arts Centre (Aberystwyth, Wales), "International Ceramics Festival", dates, 2001 Mar/Apr:7, 2007 Mar/Apr:16, 2007 May/Jun:15 Abigail's Blue Eyes glaze c/10, 1999 Jul/Aug:35 "About Pyrometers…" (Marc Ward), 2001 Mar/Apr:42 "About Wood-fired Pottery" (Jenna McCracken) (the work of Susan Beecher), 2006 Mar/Apr:55-58 Abright, Bill, works photos, 2006 Jul/Aug:62 Abromaitis, Karin, works photos, 2003 Mar/Apr:60 ACC, awards, 1999 Jan/Feb:7 ACC Baltimore, Winter Show dates, 2004 Jan/Feb:9 ACC Craft Show, dates, 1999 Jul/Aug:7 ACC Mentor Program, 2004 Jan/Feb:9 ACC Southeast Conference, dates, 2003 May/Jun:13 "ACC Southeast Regional Exhibition" call
    [Show full text]