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Amaco Underglaze Velvets And Low Fire Clear Glaze Question


cambriapottery

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Amaco underglaze velvets have been applied to a sculpture. The colours are vibrant after bisque cone 08. Now we want to apply a sheen with a clear glaze but we don't want to lose any of this initial vibrance. My test run on some items seem to have changed the colours drastically inspite of keeping the temperature low, below cone 07. Does anyone have a good recipe for low fire clear glaze over these underglazes without loss of colour?

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I use Amaco underglazes extensively, in my classrom. I have found that using Amaco's clear glaze, actually makes the underglazes MORE vivid. They are essentially made to be coated with clear. Some of them look bland without it.

I fire to Cone 05, and have no issues with thr underglazes turning out dull.

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:( after printing out this recipe, i realized that you want to fire at a much lower temperature.  sorry, do not know one for that low.

 

for anyone who uses velvets and fires to cone 6, this clear will not change colors because it does not have zinc in it.

 

Glossy clear, no zinc  cone 6

kona f4                  35

gerstley borate      23

silica                      18

barium carb.            8

whiting                     8

EPK                         8        

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Yeeeeah, thing with Velvets is that they are designed specifically to not form a solid line. That's perfectly okay, if you're looking for a softer application (works GREAT for fur, and also shading wash, when watered down), but if you're looking for BOLD, BRIGHT color, I cannot speak more highly of Clay Art Center of Tacoma's underglazes. They are so bold, it's almost like Copic or Prismacolor professional markers. I've dedicated my whole ceramic career to finding a perfect underglaze combination for my technique, and if you have ANY underglaze questions, this rodent lady is aaaall guinea pig ears! ^_^

This dragon was outlined in CACT's Baltic Black A and shaded with Amaco's Velvet black (varying UG:water ratios). :)

 

And... my clear has a buncha zinc. >.<

It eats purples pretty bad.

Has flint, EPK, and gerstley borate...

 

post-63665-0-95408200-1450090004_thumb.jpg

post-63665-0-95408200-1450090004_thumb.jpg

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If it's the zinc that is changing the colors, perhaps someone has a low-fire zinc-free recipe?

 

http://digitalfire.com/4sight/education/g1214m_cone_5-7_20x5_glossy_base_glaze_114.html

 

If this doesn't keep you out of trouble, nothing will :)

 

I don't know how widespread this stuff is, but I'm going to shamelessly name drop and say that Sarah Pike turned me on to it. (She used it to teach classes, not on her own work.) My local arts centre is currently testing it as well, and it is really user friendly and very colour responsive. I'm beginning my own rounds of testing next week.

http://plainsmanclays.com/ravenscrag/index.php

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