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Help! Need An Oven Glaze That Is Food-Safe


lisalovely

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So, I don't have a clue about ceramics, but I'm trying to do a DIY Sharpie mug. I took some IKEA mugs, removed the glaze using Armor Etch, wrote on my design using oil-based sharpie pens. Now I'm looking for a glaze I can put on top to seal the design. I don't have a kiln, just an oven, and because it's a mug, I need a glaze that is food-safe and heat resistant for dishwasher and microwave use. Am I just totally in over my head or does such a product exist?

 

If not, is there any way to create a similar product that is dishwasher and microwave safe?post-65755-0-73188500-1418660770_thumb.jpg

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You won't find a glaze that will mature in a domestic oven.  Your sharpie is likely to burn away (disappear) if you were to glaze and fire in a ceramics kiln.

 

You might find you can purchase decals/decal printer paper that can be "set" in a domestic oven.  There was a thread on here recently discussing such, but I don't think anyone on the forum had actually tried them.

 

Good Luck with finding what you need.

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I'm pretty sure to do the sharpie mugs, you simply draw on a glazed item and then bake it on - no messing with the underlying glaze at all, so not sure where you got the idea of the etching.  My wife did this with her class once and they all came out successful for what it is.  It's not "permanent" like true glaze is, it does come off with a good amount of abrasion, like even my fingernail if I wanted it off.  Other products to do similar things would be a Pebeo Porcelaine china paint pen, which is made to bake on at home oven temps - it is also not permanent, but I believe it's more resilient than Sharpie.

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Something to try on my grand-nephews at christmas.

 

I'm pretty sure that you don't need to etch first, but dish-washing to clean the

surface might be sensible.

 

Sounds transient but potentially fun.

http://www.popsugar.com/smart-living/Sharpie-Mug-DIY-Project-24955886

 

Better yet use something a little more resistant

http://www.livingwellspendingless.com/2014/02/10/sharpie-mug/

http://en.pebeo.com/Creative-leisure/Painting-on-China-and-Ceramic/Porcelaine-150-Paint

 

... I would assume that they are not food safe, so keep on the outside of the cup and

away from the lip contact area.

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There was no need to remove the glaze from the cups; just wash them to remove any oils, dirt. Use Sharpies with oil-based ink or Porcelain Pens designed for writing on glazed wares, then bake in the oven following your directions. Exterior use only. Google "Sharpie pen drawing on plates" and you'll get a trove of DYI links that explains the process.

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