Wednesday 25 September 2013

A few recent pieces

All the following pieces were fired quite recently in the electric kiln to cone 10:

Bud vase, Nuka glaze

Bud vase, Nuka glaze

Vase, matte ash glaze and slips

Carved pot, matte ash glaze

Vase, Oribe glaze

Oribe style vase

Sake cup, Nuka glaze


Sake cup interior

Matte ash glazes are quite new to me so I'm doing alot of glaze tests to see what works and what doesn't. The matte ash vase above may be re-fired in the wood kiln in October to see how the glaze texture and colour change in reduction. This surface was created by sponging on different metal oxide slips, then pouring over a matte ash glaze containing rutile. the result is quite interesting, if very subdued.. it has something of the ancient feel I was hoping to achieve.


Thursday 12 September 2013

A large work in progress

The lower section for this piece was thrown a few days ago and in the rush of doing other things I almost forgot about it. By the time I got back to it, the clay had become quite hard and I wasn't sure if I could successfully coil onto the rim..anyway, I tried, and this is the result. To begin with, I didn't have a clear vision of what I was making..I had in mind to make a kind of totemic form, rather like a standing stone, but eventually it turned into something quite figurative; a very tall bottle vase.


As the vase stiffens I am layering a coarse texture onto the outside, using a darker clay body. If the piece survives the bisque, I would love to be able to fire it in an anagama kiln.

Next day: it's so damp and humid at the moment, I had to use the hairdryer on the upper half so I could start applying more texture. I am always a little surprised that the pot doesn't collapse after adding all this mushy slip!

Stage two: texture added

And now I have quite a big problem.. it's dawned on me that the piece is a little too tall for my electric kiln. Oops. I'm wondering if I can extend the height of the kiln with lightweight kiln bricks and cover the top with ceramic fibre and kiln shelves for a bisque firing. Has anyone out there tried that and succeeded? I guess the danger is uneven temperature and the pot cracking, but I may have to take the risk.

Zoomorphic tea bowl

This piece started out as a simple bowl with a rounded handle. Then I added the feet because the weight of the handle made it topple over. When I noticed it looked rather zoomorphic I decided to put a tail on it .. the result looks a little bit like a tortoise, albeit one with three legs :D :





Available in my Folksy online store

Sunday 1 September 2013

Second experimental gas firing

Two days ago I did another gas firing, building and firing a small kiln in one day. This time the chamber was slightly bigger; approx. 13.5 inches cubed plus a 4.5 inch firebox on one side.

Kiln with roof removed. Bricks on left to shield burner.
It was a rather cloudy, humid day, with rain threatening most of the time. I had hoped the firing would take around 6 hours, but in the event, I had great problems getting the temperature to cone 10. Why, I'm not sure..I think perhaps the propane burner is not large enough (45,000 BTU), although it is rated as powerful enough for this size of kiln. In the end, I could only get cone 7 down after nearly 12 hours!. The temperature was creeping up very slowly to 1220 degrees C, but then it became windy, started raining and the temperature on the pyrometer began to fall again. At that point I had had enough and turned the gas off.

In a way I was lucky to get anything decent from the kiln..these two pots were directly in the path of the flame so the heat work over many hours has melted the ash properly:

bottle vase, approx 4 inches tall

beaker, approx. 4 inches tall

And for me, this tea caddy would have been the best piece if only the raw ash on the lid had fully melted. I was very pleased with the orange-red colour of the body as it showed I'd achieved some strong reduction in the kiln:


Hopefully, it can be re-fired successfully, perhaps in the smokeless wood kiln at Sheffield.

I'm enjoying experimenting with rough textures at the moment, and this piece has a slightly marine feeling to it..like a rock or coral which is being worn smooth by the waves:

vase, approx 5 inches tall. unfired.


Ideally I'd like to leave some of these pieces unglazed and get them nice and crusty with ash in a wood kiln. Unless a very thin glaze is applied, it's likely to destroy most of the detail in the texture. For firing in the electric kiln, I will also try a black stoneware clay and then brush on a lighter, very matte ash glaze for contrast. Last week I put together a glaze recipe which was basically batt wash (alumina hydrate and china clay, plus 20% wood ash. Fired in the electric kiln, the result was a very white, matte, slightly pourous surface, but it did break nicely on the edges, revealing the darker clay colour beneath. It could be an interesting glaze for creating rock-like surfaces, with various stains or oxides added to it:


And lastly, this little piece was a glaze test, fired in the electric to cone 10. Black slip was brushed on and then sponged off, leaving remnants in the depressions and crevices. A pale matte ash glaze was then poured over the top. The small amount of cobalt oxide in the black slip has shown through as a pale blue, the overall effect being slightly pebble-like.


I'd really like to achieve this kind of effect with a grey under-glaze..perhaps a black-iron oxide slip would work better.

Thanks for reading!