Jump to content

Callie Beller Diesel

Moderators
  • Posts

    4,479
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Callie Beller Diesel

  1. Our banking laws are different here, and we’re not allowed to add a POS surcharge onto card sales.  I’ve always viewed credit card fees as part of my COGS, and just incorporated it into the sticker price. I’ve seen a few people offer cash discounts, but that’s becoming more and more rare.

    Taxes are taxes, and the government gets bent at me in ways I don’t like if I don’t collect and remit.

     

  2. I have really hard water. I have to descale my kettle probably twice a month, but I’ve never known it to affect my wheelhead. To get lime scale you have to evaporate a few gallons of water, not the amount you throw with.

    I used to get similar discolouration when I was using a cone 10 porcelaneous stoneware, but if you clean your wheelhead it doesn’t really form. I haven’t had any since I’ve switched to red clay. If it got bad, I’d occasionally take some 220 grit black sandpaper to it, but mostly it wasn’t an issue. 

  3. I live somewhere dry, so algae isn’t ever something I’ve had to deal with. But I’ve left reclaim in storage for years, when I was in between studio spaces. I just kept it in 5 gallon buckets with the lids on tight. Bags will work well as long as they don’t have holes and aren’t moving it around a bunch.

    If you’re slurry mixing your reclaim, you don’t need to lay it on plaster to get it to dry. You can hang it in an old pillowcase, or you can lay out a thrift store sheet on a wire shelf and spread your reclaim slip on that. Your slurry shouldn’t be completely fluid if you’re doing it up like this. 

    If space is a consideration, you don’t need to keep your dried pieces, trimmings and wet slop in separate buckets. You can combine them into one. While bone dry clay does slake faster than leather hard stuff, it’ll all get there given time.  

    When you say you’ve got wet waste clay, I assume that’s the pots that got too mushy, plus your throwing slop. You need to add the fine particles from the throwing slop back into the rest of the clay, or you’ll find your reclaim is short.

  4. Shelf protectors like that are sometimes called wasters because they’re not expected to survive.  If you’re making them out of a stoneware you know to be more refractory than the earthenware you’re testing, shrinkage isn’t going to be a big issue. But consult with the head tech person at your studio to see how they want you to work that. It’s their equipment, and they may have preferences. 

    If you liked Tony’s articles on glaze and clay experiments, you’re gonna love the materials listings he’s got. Here’s the link for talc, and the why’s and wherefore’s of its use in ceramics. https://digitalfire.com/material/talc . It’s usually added to low and mid fire clay bodies to help with thermal expansion/glaze fit, but there’s other stuff too.

    Digitalfire is a godsend to us all, as is the Glazy calculator. You’d also like the Potter’s Dictionary by Hamer and Hamer. Although that book is a bit of a spend, it’s worth every penny.

  5. I went from initial intro to clay in HS straight into a college program, so early on I was taught to consider whether or not any given form needed trimming, and if so, why. My instructors also tended to frown on too much trimming as they said it was a sign of poor throwing skills. There’s a lot of technical reasons why that last might not be true, and lots of pottery making traditions where that attitude would be considered patently absurd. There’s also some forms that are easier to make or are more structurally sound if you throw them thick and trim afterwards. Think  very wide serving pieces with a shallow interior curve. 

    But if you’ve got a nice box of pre-prepared clay formulated for throwing, you don’t need to trim a foot ring onto every mug you make unless it’s a design element. Recentering a piece takes time, and if the design is served well by simply rounding the edges and smoothing the bottom with a silicone rib, why take on the extra work? It’s less work in the long run to get your walls and bottoms even in the throwing.

    I was taught to view foot rings either as a functional necessity (to allow drainage on a berry bowl for instance), or as a pedestal to elevate or give visual lightness to a piece. A consciously chosen design element. I do put foot rings on most serving pieces, and a couple of teacup-inspired mug designs, and any bowl with a curved interior.

    I find other ways of finishing the bottoms of other mug designs, storage jars, or anything with a more angular transition from horizontal to vertical. Any flat bottomed pot still gets some form of finishing, it just might not be with a Do-all.

  6. It’s a problem with trying to teach strangers anything on the internet, for sure. We need to know where people are starting from to give them useful-to-them instructions, and not everyone starts from the same place. 
     

    Just like any other thread on this forum, I hope anyone who needs more clarification will tag the poster they’d like more info from. 

  7. Okay. To add a third option that has nothing to do with Mac or Apple, and is available on Android (version 9 and higher) and IPhone, I’d like to introduce the Snapseed app. Most people take their pictures on their phones these days, and having an editing app right where you work is very handy.  It’s a google property, so it’s ad free and no cost.  I personally find very intuitive to use, and it has a very low learning curve. Unlike programs meant for desktops, it doesn’t have a lot of functions you don’t use frequently, and as a result is less confusing.

    If you’re writing your post on a desktop, you can do the typing on your keyboard, and after you save, log into the forum from your phone’s internet browser and edit your post to add in the photo. 

    *most newer phones will offer you the option of choosing your file size when you go to upload the image. Small or medium works just fine.*

    But. If your phone doesn’t do that, you can resize your pic like this:

    Download snapseed from wherever you get your apps, and allow it to access your photos when prompted.

    1. Before you open your photo,  tap the three dots at the top right corner of the screen.

    2. Settings>Image Sizing, and select 800 px (the default is no resize).

    That’s the # of pixels on the largest side of your image. Making this number small  will only affect image quality if you try to print this picture off. The resolution on your computer screen shouldn’t chang, but smaller images load faster for those with spotty internet. 

    3. Return to the menu and open your photo.

    4. The option to export is at the bottom. It offers a few ways to save. I usually “save a copy,” so I can edit the original multiple ways, but save works fine if you don’t need the original for anything else. 

    5. Your smaller image will be saved in your photos file.

    If you want to crop or do other edits, I can do other tutorials in the business section, but I want to keep this simple. 
    (shameless dog content credit goes to Bruiser, the Boston pug X studio “helper”)

    76412F52-FF1A-45E9-926D-5C68B33A5B89.jpeg

    A3C1C3D3-DED0-4AB0-985A-405CDDD64A7B.jpeg

     

    E34BA353-34C0-4F71-B3E4-58411811C288.jpeg

    29B66318-F073-432B-8C46-EB1C70572743.png

  8. My home has forced air heating, so my studio has a heating vent in the ceiling. Because my studio is pretty close to the furnace that blows air through the whole house, I have to keep things pretty clean. As much as everyone seems to hate mopping, it’s gotta happen on the regular. 

  9. I assume you mean G200 feldspar. I’m basing this answer off of that assumption, but if I’m wrong, let me know.

    The analyses of Custer and G200 are similar enough that it’ll be pretty close just doing a 1:1 substitution. The sodium and potassium are close enough that it shouldn’t matter, but there’s differences in silica and calcium that may have a minor effect. 

    An exact adjustment (or as close as I think it’s possible to get would be):

    51 Custer

    17 silica

    13 gerstley borate

    9 whiting (calcium carb)

    10 dolomite

    4 zinc oxide

    I rounded the batch numbers for easy measuring. The silica:alumina ratio is as close to identical as I can get it, the flux ratio is identical, and the Stull chart position are identical. If you were to add some epk to this recipe, it probably wouldn’t craze as badly. 

    9C3765B2-795A-437E-A7BC-44FF2E782049.png

  10. Nearest one to me is about 20 minutes, but that assumes you aren’t going through the industrial area when they’re backing and loading cars in the train yard. This causes many a long traffic line because of the one lousy intersection.

    But if I go to the supplier, it’s usually a good 4 hour errand, because the place I get shipping supplies and the place I get my bags and tissue are also on the way. Plus you have to allow for the gossip time while you’re there, the Tim Horton’s run, etc etc. 

  11. On 2/12/2022 at 9:05 AM, Hulk said:

    sodium percarbonate, sodium carbonate, surfactants and polymer.

    That’s a lot of soda ash, or things that dissolve into soda ash.

    Adding any composite cleaners to your reclaim is probably not going to go smoothly.  Thank you for sharing the experience @carissman, and I’m sorry that happened!

  12. I have just the link you’re looking for!

    https://help.glazy.org/guide/calculator/#automatically-importing-recipes

    If you scroll down the menu on the left to the Calculator, the drop down under that has an example on how to substitute local materials into a glaze recipe and adjust the formulation so it matches.

    It’s fantastic that potters from all over the world can share recipes, but we don’t have access to the exact same materials everywhere.

  13. I am of the find a base and adjust it so it does what I want school of thought. Since I use Plainsman clays, if I get my recipes from Digitalfire, more than half my work is already done. That said, I’ve been poking around Glazy a bit, especially because I’ve been looking at Joe Thompson’s work. He’s left some very generous information in his glaze notes. (That’s @OldForgeCreations)

  14. They have a number of different calcium borate frits on the market. I know Ferro has had production issues in the last year and they’re still sorting some things out, but there should be a number of alternatives in the UK. Worst case scenario, you can use Ulexite or Colemanite, but I believe common practice is to calcine it first, or it’ll cause glaze spitting.

    If you have any familiarity with glaze calculation software, you can use glazy.com to substitute in another frit and maintain the chemistry.

    If you don’t have any familiarity, post the recipe here and let us know which alternative frits your supplier has available, and one of us here can do the reformulation for you.

  15. I was initially taught to use other people’s recipes, and was given vague information about what the ingredients and their components did. Even in high school my art teacher mixed glazes from other people’s recipes, so I figured that was the only way people did it. I didn’t even realize you could buy premade stuff for a long time! That said, I did buy my clear base as dry mix for a few years there, because the recipe was open source and I could tweak it if I needed, and because it fit my chosen clay body very, very well. They discontinued it because a couple of ingredients were harder to get, so now I’m reformulating to try and find something with the same fit and colour response. I’m not moving really fast on the project, but it is underway.

    But yeah, everything that Min said. I like knowing how things work. Some people do sudoku, some of us poke around to solve chemistry problems in Glazy for fun on a Saturday afternoon. I like knowing how the pieces fit together, and that glazes are a really funky combination of mineralogy, physics, and 2 or more kinds of chemistry.

  16. Most of the brands we’re familiar with have pretty solid reputations, and I think certainly in North America we’re blessed with a number of good choices. I bought my Brent C almost 20 years ago, and I’ve never had so much as a hiccup out of it. 

    That said, it was also a pretty guilt laden purchase at the time, because of our financial situation. It was justifiable in my case because it was always my intention to work as a professional potter, but the $1700 was 2 months take home pay at the wage I was getting at the time, and it took some doing. 

    There’s some real and valid concerns about accessibility when it comes to learning to throw. I completely understand why there’s a sudden prevalence of those small, cheap wheels on the ‘Zon. For the price of an intro course, you can work in your own space and not be limited by time or access to equipment. I can’t help but think that if someone were to make a version like that, but that didn’t give up with a sad puff of smoke  if you looked at them sideways, it would allow a lot more people to enjoy the craft more easily, or to build a business initially.

  17. The last time I changed clays, I had to change all of my glazes at the same time because I went from cone 10 to cone 6, in addition to going from a white clay to a much darker one.

    I found working on darker clays in general was a shift in thinking about decoration. The darker clay is a much more active player, as opposed to a passive canvas I find. You really have no choice but to work with it, rather than trying to overcome it. Even in decoration styles where you’re covering the red clay with a white slip in order to add brighter colours, there’s still evidence of it.  For me, it was a whole mindset shift when it came to decorating. 

  18. I am blessed with choice. I have easy access to both big box stores and a few local ones as well, so sourcing depends on the project. I’ll pick up sand paper at Canadian Tire while I’m there, but I’ll get cabinet hardware from the local place that has the nice stuff. I do tend to like going to the physical store, because I will sometimes find off label uses for things that solve whatever problem I have. 

    I do like getting packages in the mail, so I see the appeal of shopping online, and I want to like it more than I do. But I hate it if I have to make a return. I find I’ll shop online for known quantities. I’ll happily order kiln elements and parts online, to save the trip to the store. My supplier would have to order them anyway, so I’m cutting out the intermediary. However if I’m ordering clay, my supplier is across the city. I’ll go fetch it myself to save a delivery charge, and plan to go get packing supplies and bags on the same day, because those suppliers are also in the same part of the city.

     

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.