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Peggy Heer's Spooze For Mug Handles


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I was going to switch from my slip and vinegar mix to spooze for scoring and joining mug handles. Anyone use it specifically for handles and have you had any issues? 

 

my current joining slip is clay, water and vinegar blended and haven't really had many problems but do occasionally misjudge the dryness of either the handle or mug and had a few crack off here and there. Since making new batch thought I would try this.

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I am just as happy with magic water. When attaching handles, or stems to chalices, or assembling teapots it is the only way I go anymore. At the same time assembly of anything slab is easier and has less joint cracking with the magic water.

 

 

best,

Pres

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Snooze works great for repairs but isn't necessary for handles. And it does stink after a short time.

Marcia

Being  a JB here, something is happening Marcia, typos are linked to our brains,

retire for refire...

Snooze instead of Spooze...

Happy retirement because many refires are not often that!

Snoozing for handles on pots, not necessary for handles, I agree, for repairs I haven't tried.

The Spooze is GREAT for repairs.

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What's the diff between the slip/vinegar/corn syrup mix and "magic water"? Is that a product one purchases? 

 

Magic water recipe is

1 Gallon Water

3 Tablespoons of Liquid Sodium Silicate
1 1/2 Teaspoons of Soda Ash 
 
You can use it just like this or take dry scraps of clay and use the magic water in place of ordinary water to make joining slip with.
(you can also add a titch of paper pulp to the magic water slip for troublesome clay joins). 
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I thought magic water was 150 proof but after two hours looking at u-tube videos on this subject I now think thats fire water

The thing I learned is after drinking 12 ounces of fire water you will not care about attaching handles or if they are cracked.

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Magic water works well with clay in it, even if it dries a bit to paste. If too thick I just add a little more Magic Water to it. When I first heard of it, I decided to try it out by buying a bottle of radiator repair, and letting the other stuff settle and pouring off the top into some water and adding the Soda Ash to that. It was proof enough that it was worth buying the Sodium Silicate to have for that. I made it in the HS, and a gallon would usually last 3 months for all of my classes. I started using it at home and go through a gallon in a production period( usually March to November). I find that it is especially strong with stems on chalices or goblets, and for handles on all sorts of pots.

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I thought magic water was 150 proof but after two hours looking at tube videos on this subject I now think thats fire water

The thing I learned is after drinking 12 ounces of fire water you will not care about attaching handles or if they are cracked.

I'd go with the frontal lobotomy Mark! Cross posting here. Be careful what you believe sourced from Youtube.

And you have 2 hours to watch youtube, you should be out there hanging off Xmas trees fishing for your Xmas dinner, or is that gonna be tuna steaks

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