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Pres

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Posts posted by Pres

  1. Interesting Selection @Chilly I read a lot of the same! Mostly on a tablet, Ever read L.E. Modesitt? Social Science fiction/fantasy.

    @Mark C.any particular genres, are there some with more play times, 60's, 70.s, Surf Rock, Country??? 

    @oldladygenres? Mystery, scifi, fantasy, thriller?

    My tastes in music and books runs all over the place, one minute it is Hard Rock and the nest it may be Classical Guitar, books may run from Sci-Fi to Thrillers and anywhere in between with a lot of the Classics thrown in. 

    best,

    Pres

  2. Hi folks, no new questions in the pool so once again I'll post one.

    Periodically we seem to ask the same question about how you keep your company. Some folks have a pet they talk to, others listen to music, and some watch a little TV or have some other background noise. I  have been watching old movies mostly, as I don't have to watch them as I know them, but if interested in a particular scene I do watch for a few minutes. What is your preference?

    QotW: What is your latest background "noise" in the studio?

  3. @Rockhopper, In cold Winter months I let the slurry freeze outside in the shop, Then place it in a pillow case hanging  near the heat.  Freezing brings much of the water to the surface, and  when thawing the water drips out quickly. Then take the pillow case away from the heat to finish thawing. I don't have but, so I cut/slam and cone wedge.

     

    best,

    Pres 

  4. @GLR, When you roll out your slabs do you start with a thick long piece of clay lying parallel to the roller, or do you start with a thick slab?  I used to get this sort of thing with slab rollers, and then I started throwing the clay sideways onto a table to stretch/lengthen the clay into a thick slab then rolled this out. It did help, that looks like the clay is getting rolled over itself forming the air bubble like crease.

     

    best,

    Pres

  5. I haven't had pug mill at home, but do remember the Walker at the HS. I would always be amazed at the clay that came out of the machine.  Throw in some scraps from the hanbuilders, some slop from the throwers, and run through twice to have great clay. I never noticed any auger marks in the clay no matter which way I cut it. As long as it didn't dog ear on me it was good to go. I think that the side delivery at the end of the auger run had something to do with the compressed body and the lack of auger spirals. It was also easy to cut a cutting frame for 3 lb throwing pieces no matter what angle.

    best,

    Pres

  6. 2 hours ago, Caroline Ennis said:

    Dear @Pres

    Thank you so much for your recommendations! This is all very helpful.  Is the Van Gilder book you are talking about titled, "Wheel Thrown Pottery"? And is the M^6 book you are referring to called, "Mastering Cone 6 Glazes: Improving durability, fit and aesthetics" by, John Hesselberth?

     

    Caroline

    Caroline yes on both counts. If looking for books, you can also look up. . . The Complete Guide to Mid-Range Glazes, John Britt, ISBN 978-1-4547-0777-6.  Very well organized and a wide variety of glaze categories and explanations.

    As with any new glaze, I highly recommend testing, testing, testing. In my later years, I cheated on that requiring that 2nd semester wheel throwing students had to include 20 glaze test tiles in their final portfolio. These were required to have single glaze, and multiple glaze test tiles so that layering of glazes was explored. We made their work a little easier by having a test tile extruder die that would make  two strips of  self standing test tiles tat were cut to 11/2 inch pieces.

    best,

    Pres

  7. Welcome to the forum, @Caroline Ennis, I hope you enjoy your time here and find some useful answers. I used a combination of glazes from the M^6 book, and from Bill Van Gilder, along with some glazes that were commercial from Minnesota clay and ART. The Van Gilder glazes played well with the glazes from M^6 and I still use some of these today. My liner glaze that I use is a transparent liner glaze that I added some opacifiers to for a white over darker clay bodies. Mixing your own should stretch your budget if you have been using commercials up to this point. However, the first year of buying materials and equipment can be expensive. 

     

    best,

    Pres

  8. Another thought here would be to salt the kiln shelf with grog both for the bisque and the glaze firing. It may, not guaranteed,  ease the stress enough. I used to keep a salt shaker with grog in it to salt the shelves when teaching in HS. It requires vacuuming carefully afterward, but in many case was helpful.

     

    best,

    Pres 

  9. 15 minutes ago, Callie Beller Diesel said:

     

    One way to confirm this would be to take any bisqued pieces you have and do a ping test. Just flick it and see if it rings or if it clicks. Click=crack you can’t see.

    I have been using this test for years with patens/plates, as there are times a hairline crack cannot be seen, but can be heard!

     

    best,

    Pres

  10. It looks to me that they are larger than sieve size, but not certain of that. First thing I would do is to re-sieve the glaze to see if you get any particles in the sieve. Secondly, even though the glaze looks to have gone on evenly, did you wash the pot before hand? Did the pot set out before glaze firing?  Was this on a lower shelf that had a shelf above with kiln wash on the bottom side? Had to ask.  Is this in a bowl?

     

    best,

    Pres

  11. @ABlanc Considering the type of crack, and the crazing of the glaze, IMHO this is a cooling dunt, where the kiln was cooled a little to quickly for large flat pieces of this sort. I used to get some cooling dunts in the early years from overzealous cooling of the kiln, or opening too soon.  How are you firing the kiln? Is it on a kiln setter, or a controller with a ramp up and down set up?

     

    best,

    Pres 

  12. Hi folks, no new questions in the question pool.

    When I was much younger, I volunteered to help on a Saturday to mix clay for the ceramics classes with the professor. The ceramics studio was on the second floor and was equipped with a Soldner like clay mixer, and a Walker pug mill. The professor had a clay body that he mixed up by bags, I remember the water hose from the sink praying over the powders as we dumped clay into the mixer. Keeping the clay wet was to keep the dust down, but it was everywhere! We mixed 3 batches that day and ran it through the Walker. Al in all, it was an 8 hr day. The professor mixed a quite a bit of slop from his slake buckets to help with plasticity, and by watching the square lugs coming out of the Walker he would tell when the clay was best. I worked with that clay the next Monday class, it was terribly short at the time, but still throwable for a second semester student. I have never mixed clay since then, deciding that I didn't have the equipment or the space resources to get into it. Heaven forbid to do it in a HS classroom, I would never get the room clean again!

    This got me to thinking about how many potters out there have made their own clay body or do the rely on a supplier to do the dust work!  There is a recent thread on the forum lately about the buying clay premixed or dry to save on shipping costs and expenses, which also brought back the previous memory.

    QotW: Do you or have you ever mixed your own clay for your studio, and if you do describe your equipment and working space?

     

    best,

    Pres

  13. I store my clay outside in PA, It is under my two sea kayaks, on wooden risers I built to hold 2000lb at a time. A large tarp covers the whole deal and is replaced when it wears out. Even though I have padded the kayak rack and tie down the tarp the strong winds will wear a tarp out in 2 years. My clay is shipped boxed untied. I use 2000lb in about 2 years, and yet never have problems with the clay drying out so long as the boxes stay intact.

     

    best,

    Pres

  14. I have never seen larger pointed vessels thrown as all have seemed to be coil constructed with a lot of paddling and compression of layered coils. 

    On another thought, I read somewhere that the shape of the Queri/amphora was to allow tilting of the container to pour into other containers for use. 

     

    best,

    Pres

  15. @GEP, I can certainly attest to the time and effort it takes to do any type of shipping situation of late. Size of boxes, and the changes in packing materials are small compared to the picture you are painting, but still a nuisance. I shipped 20 orders last year for communion sets and baptismal sets last year with a total of near $1500 in costs to the customer. This year will probably be worse. I believe that the large online shipping companies are controlling much of the sizes and delivery situations that will make it a different world for craftspeople shipping their items. This does not even include what you have mentioned in the way of social media exposure.

     

    best,

    Pres

  16. I also like to layer glazes, and often will do a dip with two contrasting colors. However, I believe that contrasting color also means contrasting values, one stronger than the other. At the same time,

    I often spray colors on over the dipped layers to mute the line between the dipped colors. Rutile green or blue from Van Gilders glaze recipes works well for this.  As the transparent glaze uses rutile(containing titanium oxide and trace elements) causing interesting breaks in texture over the other glazes as @neilestrickhas already alluded to.

    Running test tiles or small test pieces like shot glass vessels really help to pin point combinations. At the same time if using 3 colors it is really important to understand a little about color theory in choosing your glaze colors.

    best,

    Pres

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