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Does The Glaze Fit The Clay Body? Need Input...


Rex Johnson

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O.K., I'm still experimenting with a few glazes ^6-^10. (below).

 

I'm satisfied with the glazes and their outcome for the most part.

Using the Olympic 2728 kiln is finicky as some of you know, fires hot on the bottom by about a full cone from the top.

That being the case, using mostly ^6 and ^6-10 glazes shouldn't be an issue either.

 

 

Since Laguna Clay is where I get my clay locally I'm using B-Mix ^5 -^6 WC-401 and ( WC-436 ) (w/grog)  from Laguna Clay.

The problem is the ^5-^6 clay evidently can't take the heat.

At ^6 and above it starts to melt, warp, fracture the pots feet, and on the bottom the clay is blistering (bumps) under the glaze.

 

Maybe I should be using ^10 B-Mix.

You tell me.

One fellow said if I go to cone 10 clay there may be a problem with the glaze fitting the clay body.

But who makes a cone 6-10 clay body :huh:(???)

 

The glazes I've been using are those from the CA Tried and True PDF.

Also a couple Coyote ^6 glazes

 

Temmoku Glaze- "A Cone 10 recipe that works equally well at Cone 6; yields yellow “tea dust†crystals in
reduction."

Malcolm Davis Shino - "cone 6 or 10 or anything in between... and quite possibly even lower. "

Coyote Shino ^6

Coyote Iron Phoenix ^6

Pete's Black Gloss ^5-^10

 

I have my schedule down, slow fired (7+ hours) with a 1 hour soak at ^6.

These are reduction at 1650 for 30 minutes and a very slow cool down once shut down.

 

Third time hasn't been a charm but the glazes are really nice.

 

Top shelf but fractured foot from the clay actually sticking to the shelf. (B-mix 401 w/o grog)

IMG_4772-M.jpg

 

Mid/top Temmoku w/Pete's Black  this one survived without incident (B-Mix 436 w/grog)

IMG_4764-L.jpg

 

Bottom shelf, Malcolm's Shino w/Temmoku (B-Mix 436 w/grog) but warped foot, and you can see the clay body blisters in this pic...

IMG_4766-L.jpg

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Do not use cone 10 clay for cone 6 work as the clay will not be vitrified. Your 7 hour fire is pretty fast-depending on how fast you are going thru quartz inversion (1000-1100) this may be why you are getting cracking-also cooling to fast can cause cracking. The last point is that top bowl foot crack can happen as the heat can be to fast on top of your kiln.

Usually these cracks are from the above issues.I do not think its the glaze cuasing the cracks

Mark

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No, I don't either Mark. But the clay is getting that taffy look, like it's over vitrifying if that's a proper description.

The clay isn't actually cracking but actually wants to attach to the shelf and chips, or actually fractures the foot around the rim of the foot , again like breaking a piece of hard taffy.

All I can think is the clay isn't fit for this temp.

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Oh it is going past cone 6 on the bottom for sure. That said, even spot on (free standing cones) on top the clay is still sticky.

 

 

Here's a rough firing schedule form memory:

 

  • Candle 1-2 hours to 500-600 degrees.
  • 600-1200 degrees about 2 hours
  • 1200-1650 about 1.5 hours
  • hold at 1650-1700 (reduction) for 30-45 minutes
  • 1700 > 2260 2 hours
  • soak for 1 hour at 2260
  • Turn off and cover burner ports and flue
  • at this point cone 6 is bent on top and completely down on the botttom
  • cooldown is 24 hours
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I tried Laguna b-mix  cone a few years ago and stopped using it because it tends to stick to the kiln shelf - pulling small chunks out of foot rings during the glaze firing.  I just have a regular kiln sitter and do very straight forward firings always the same--no soaking or whatever ..   Read more recently that this was a problem with that clay for what reason I do not know.  Many more nice clays out there to try--good luck

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I tried Laguna b-mix  cone a few years ago and stopped using it because it tends to stick to the kiln shelf - pulling small chunks out of foot rings during the glaze firing.  I just have a regular kiln sitter and do very straight forward firings always the same--no soaking or whatever ..   Read more recently that this was a problem with that clay for what reason I do not know.  Many more nice clays out there to try--good luck

 

wow, really?...and I thought it was just me.

That is exactly what's happening, though firing a bit too hot won't help there.

I'll have to see if anyone else has this problem...

 

 

 

Hmmmm.... http://www.potters.org/subject103162.htm

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Neil has it right-juist pay attention to large cones they tell the whole story.

Try some alumina in your wax to keep feet from sticking-also have some alumina in you kiln wash then feet will not stick. I have a lifetime of sticky feet experience with porcelain at cone 11-B mix is just white stoneware-sounds like you are overfiring it.If you like your glazes at that temp switch clays.

Mark

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The problem is the one hour soak, you have to substract about 48 deg F from the top temperature if you are going at a 280 deg ramp.  If going at 270 deg F ramp per hour than for a 60 minute soak subtract 45 deg F from the 2269 Temperature, 2269-45= 2224 deg F.  IF you are afraid of pinholes etc than slow down the ramp rate.

David

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