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Clay Drying Time


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Hello!

 

I'm new to the forum, so this is my hello - Hi everybody!! About two or so weeks ago, I sculpted a pair of hands (real life size) and a human heart (slightly larger than real life size), and everything has come along nicely, until I realized that I made a big 'whoops' the hands have dried nicely, but the heart is a solid 3x3.5 inches of clay at it's widest point. It had totally slipped my mind to make it hollow (creative spontaneity?!) and now I have no clue how long it is going to take to dry. I did put holes in it to help it out a bit, but I'm still scared to fire it early. How long do you think it will take to dry? If it helps any, I live in Taos NM - a pretty dry climate.

 

Thank you!

Savannah

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If you are not in a hurry, the longer the better. If you are in a hurry, the longer the better. It may feel dry on the outside, but the inside is going to take much more time to dry.

 

Regardless, you'll need a several hours long pre-heat for bisque to reduce the likelihood of cracking/splitting. Even after a long drying time, there will still be traces of physical water in an object that thick. So, the long pre-heat, below boiling temperature, allows that trapped moisture to move to the surface and be eliminated. To be on the safe side for firing, I'd put a "fence" of broken kiln shelves/"loseable" pots around the heart so if it blows up, it will not take out any other items of value in the kiln.

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this looks as though it is going to be a sign for

a doctor's office.  is it?

No, it's just a random little thought I had that popped into my head :) The piece is called "Simplicity vs. Reality" and hopefully nothing will explode and the hands and heart(s) will all still be together

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If you are not in a hurry, the longer the better. If you are in a hurry, the longer the better. It may feel dry on the outside, but the inside is going to take much more time to dry.

 

Regardless, you'll need a several hours long pre-heat for bisque to reduce the likelihood of cracking/splitting. Even after a long drying time, there will still be traces of physical water in an object that thick. So, the long pre-heat, below boiling temperature, allows that trapped moisture to move to the surface and be eliminated. To be on the safe side for firing, I'd put a "fence" of broken kiln shelves/"loseable" pots around the heart so if it blows up, it will not take out any other items of value in the kiln.

 

This is so helpful, thank you so much!

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