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Is Is Possible To Calcine Your Own Kaolin?


hershey8

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No baking please -potters fire they do not bake or paint they glaze and fire

Cooks bake

painters paint

 

You can bisque fire EPK in any form that will hold it.

Mark

 

 

This baking deal with the public has got to start with education and having potters call it baking and painting is just to much

We make forms not cakes.

It starts with us.

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I was going to do this last week, (but then I eventually remembered where I'd put my batt-wash mix). :rolleyes:

 

Does the Kaolin need to be fired in a bowl which has already been bisqued, or can it be fired in a bowl which is being bisqued in the same firing?

 

 

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No baking please -potters fire they do not bake or paint they glaze and fire

Cooks bake

painters paint

 

You can bisque fire EPK in any form that will hold it.

Mark

 

 

This baking deal with the public has got to start with education and having potters call it baking and painting is just to much

We make forms not cakes.

It starts with us.

Correction: Cooks cook; BAKERS bake.

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No baking please -potters fire they do not bake or paint they glaze and fire

Cooks bake

painters paint

 

You can bisque fire EPK in any form that will hold it.

Mark

 

 

This baking deal with the public has got to start with education and having potters call it baking and painting is just to much

We make forms not cakes.

It starts with us.

I'm with you Mark.

 

My coworker says "Bake" sometimes, and it annoys me.  For one, it's to Middle School students, who are well beyond simplifying things.  And two, as you mentioned, we aren't eating the items, so it's not baking.  

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Well I wonder if there are different levels of calcining.  The guy I was referring to indicated that his version not only eliminated chemical water; it actually changed the material in some other chemical way. But I guess, bisqueing is adequate for potters, ceramists, cooks, bakers, and painters.    

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No baking please -potters fire they do not bake or paint they glaze and fire

Cooks bake

painters paint

 

You can bisque fire EPK in any form that will hold it.

Mark

 

 

This baking deal with the public has got to start with education and having potters call it baking and painting is just to much

We make forms not cakes.

It starts with us.

I agree with Mark. Let's use the vocabulary. I don't bake. I don't paint, I glaze. I definitely do not "play with clay", I work in my studio. I am a serious artist. Come on people. Let's step it up a notch.

TJR.

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Now back to calcining. Babs, you asked why? Apparently, kaolin, when "fired" to the appropriate temperature, gives up chemical water, which deals with shrinkage issues and LOI. I have seen it mentioned in some recipes, though right now I don't remember the specific ones. Calcined kaolin has other uses outside the realm of pottery. And if I am correct, some of those uses require that it be "fired" hotter than yer average potter's kiln. Thanks to all, and to all a good night, good morning, good day, good grief. LOI....er... LOL. ja

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When you calcine kaolin, you burn off the chemical water as well as any other organics- the stuff that's listed as L.O.I (Loss On Ignition) when you look at the makeup of a clay. So basically you're pre-shrinking the clay. In the case of kaolin, you're getting rid of about 15% shrinkage, which is significant if you've got a glaze or such that's high in kaolin. For instance, if you've read the threads about kiln wash, we always mention calcining half the kaolin for recipes that have 20-30% in them. By doing so you reduce the shrinkage of the kiln wash, which helps keep it from flaking off.

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When you calcine kaolin, you burn off the chemical water as well as any other organics- the stuff that's listed as L.O.I (Loss On Ignition) when you look at the makeup of a clay. So basically you're pre-shrinking the clay. In the case of kaolin, you're getting rid of about 15% shrinkage, which is significant if you've got a glaze or such that's high in kaolin. For instance, if you've read the threads about kiln wash, we always mention calcining half the kaolin for recipes that have 20-30% in them. By doing so you reduce the shrinkage of the kiln wash, which helps keep it from flaking off.   

 

Thanks for that great information, Neil. That helps me to understand it better. j

 

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I have a great cake recipe that uses 30% calcined EPK

the rest is high fire clay and finished with sprinkeled bakers flour then painted with colorants

Bake at 2300 for 12 hours- cool 18 hours

serve warm

Mark

Is this food safef? What no corn syrup??

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