Tuesday has been a manic day, with too much to cram in
First thing this morning we made up a new batch of glaze.
I phoned the Somerton Gallery to ask when they needed my pots by.
and they said Wednesday morning. I explained that I was just glazing them and the soonest we could get them to the gallery was Thursday morning. so Thursday morning it is.
First thing this morning we made up a new batch of glaze.
I phoned the Somerton Gallery to ask when they needed my pots by.
and they said Wednesday morning. I explained that I was just glazing them and the soonest we could get them to the gallery was Thursday morning. so Thursday morning it is.
then found I hadn't got any matches.
The first four pots in the Raku kiln.
The first four pots in the Raku kiln.
I've already come to the conclusion the hole for the burner isn't big enough.
within the hour it had heated up nicely.
8 comments:
Having fun is one of the main requirements of a raku party, you did that right. Nice glaze on half of that bowl but I'm not sure what steps were taken to know what went wrong on the other pots. Here's an article that About.com did using my photos, it might give you some tips:
http://pottery.about.com/od/firingthekiln/ss/raku_firing.htm
Cheers,
Lori
Raku can be a roll of the dice, particularly as you start out. I did it years ago when I was just beginning to make pots, but haven't done it for years. No doubt Tracey Broome will see this post and comment with some helpful suggestions. She's been turning out some lovely raku work.
I would agree that you got too much reduction, but what was the recipe, how long did you leave it in the can,what was your combustible material, how hot did you fire it? I have some great easy recipes if you want them, just give a shout out. Copper Carbonate is your friend if you like Raku.
My Raku class always has fun and we never even worry about the results, I think it's all about playing with fire! I love that little kiln!!
Hey, I emailed you an excel file with some recipes, if you can't open it, let me know and I will resend in a word doc! Good luck!!
mmmmm interesting paul! did you use a pyro? and some of the glaze looks like a run off dont know? is it all over the shelf? or it didnt get to melting temp...we leave ours in the sawdust bins for an hour at least for lustres it really depends on the glaze and you dont always need water it depends on the technique..it really looks like a fun night though and as others have said that is the raku thing!!
I knew Tracey would come through ...
Just another thought paul, you have a lot of carbon residue inside the bin which indicates unburnt fuel so either don't cover the chimney space or reduce your fuel going in and or you need more primary oxygen going in with the burner to use up the fuel, probably all 3 of those things..i'll take a pick of the inside of my kiln, the fibre is still white..
Post a Comment