mayaearth Posted January 25, 2013 Report Share Posted January 25, 2013 I recently reclaimed a couple buckets of a variety of stoneware clays that I've been collecting over the years. All clay is the high fire, just difference sources and a small variety of colors, brown and grays. In the mixing process I did add dry fire clay to the mix (Hawthorne 35 mesh) to bring it up to a drier consistency, then wedged, and rolled into slabs. In working with the slabs, the clay was cracking as I was building, even as the clay was a workable wetness. I'm wondering if more wedging would be beneficial or if there is something else I could add during the mixing process to make the clay more workable. Thanks for any input! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neilestrick Posted January 25, 2013 Report Share Posted January 25, 2013 Ball clay would add plasticity, but here's the problem: By adding raw clay- fire clay, ball clay, whatever- you're changing the formula of the clay so that the proportion of clay to feldspar to silica gets out of whack and the clay may not fire as tight as it should. This is a bit less of an issue with cone 10 clays, but can be a big problem with cone 6 and low fire clays. When I worked as a tech for a clay supplier, I regularly received calls from teachers who suddenly had major problems with their glazes. They had been adding ball clay every time they recycled their low fire white clay, and after a few rounds the clay formula was all messed up and their glazes started shivering. No good way to fix that, either. The clay had to be replaced. SO, if you're going to add raw clay to your mix, if it's a cone 10 stoneware clay I would also add about 5% feldspar and 5% flint. For cone 6 clay go with 10%. When working with one clay body, the best thing to do is either buy some dry mix of that same body, or even easier just keep a bucket of dry trimmings to mix in with the slop. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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