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Simple Runny Glaze


Anders

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I'm a bit of a greenhorn when it comes  to composing glazes, and it is a public Electric kiln i'm using.

The kiln is programed to fire at 1260 c0 , and i can't  change that.

 

But it would be nice to have a White runny glaze that was easy to make.

And could be used with other colored glazes, to get that nice runny effect.

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Guest JBaymore

Anders,

 

Remember that cones and end point temperature are not the same thing.  I can go to 1260 C in 10 minutes... and I can get there in 10 hours and I can get there in 10 days.  In each case the impacts on the clay body and glazes will be different.

 

If the kiln is fired the exact same rate to 1260 C ervery time.... then the clay and glaze will be pretty much the same each firing (same end point cone heat-work).  But if the kiln takes 8 hours one time,..... and 12 hours another time due to differences in the loading or whatever.... expect different results.

 

best,

 

................john

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You may wish to look into ash or fake ash glazes. I just tested out one called Diana's Fake Ash that, when used on white clay, glazes an off-white with beige-to-gray runnels. It's very pretty.

 

I'm having a hard time picturing white and runny, because white is so static a color. You're basically looking for something that will lighten up other glaze colors and cause them to move?

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Guest JBaymore

The peresence of alumina (Al2O3) in the glaze is what prevents it from running at any given cone.  If you have a glaze you like, adjust the # of mols of alumina in the glaze down and even below typical limits, and it will start running.  (Use glaze calc software to do this.)

 

The 'fast and dirty' imprecise way to approch this is to look in the glaze recipe for the clay content....and keep dropping this in test amounts til it runs.  Clay is a prime source of alumina in the glaze.

 

best,

 

.................john

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I am intrigued by your request.  most public kiln owners would be horrified to find that someone deliberately put a runny glaze on a pot and it ran all over their shelf.  what is your purpose in using such a glaze?

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I am intrigued by your request.  most public kiln owners would be horrified to find that someone deliberately put a runny glaze on a pot and it ran all over their shelf.  what is your purpose in using such a glaze?

 

Many of the glazes I mix for my students to use are runny. But I train them on how to use them so as to avoid ruining my shelves. Yes, I do have a few that stick in every firing, but most aren't very bad and clean up easily. And once they see how it can ruin their pots if they stick to the shelves, they are much more careful in the future.

 

Runny glazes make for very interesting surfaces.

 

post-6933-0-36947500-1401980673_thumb.jpg

post-6933-0-36947500-1401980673_thumb.jpg

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Runny glazes are fun when they do what we want them to do, not so much when the end up looking like snot.  Another experimental option is to glaze the piece and dip the rim in sieved wood stove ash.  I keep a bucket for times when I feel like living on the edge.

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  • 4 years later...
On 6/5/2014 at 11:04 AM, neilestrick said:

 

Many of the glazes I mix for my students to use are runny. But I train them on how to use them so as to avoid ruining my shelves. Yes, I do have a few that stick in every firing, but most aren't very bad and clean up easily. And once they see how it can ruin their pots if they stick to the shelves, they are much more careful in the future.

 

Runny glazes make for very interesting surfaces.

 

post-6933-0-36947500-1401980673_thumb.jpg

post-6933-0-36947500-1401980673_thumb.jpg

That's a beautiful glaze combination. Would you mind telling us how you glazed this piece? Is that the same white glaze you included in your post above? 

Sorry to resurrect an old thread. But I found this while searching for runny glazes, and it was just too lovely not to ask.

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6 hours ago, Achilles said:

That's a beautiful glaze combination. Would you mind telling us how you glazed this piece? Is that the same white glaze you included in your post above? 

Sorry to resurrect an old thread. But I found this while searching for runny glazes, and it was just too lovely not to ask.

Thank you for the kind words! That pot has 3 glazes on it- a glossy tea colored glaze dipped first, then a pour of the white included above, and then big spots of a 3rd glaze brushed on.

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