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Tony Hansen
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Chemistry plus physics. Maintain your recipes, test results, firing schedules, pictures, materials, projects, etc. Access your data from any connected device. Import desktop Insight data (and of other products). Group accounts for industry and education. Private accounts for potters. Get started.

Conquer the Glaze Dragon With Digitalfire Reference info and software

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Interactive glaze chemistry for the desktop. Free (no longer in development but still maintained, M1 Mac version now available). Download here or in the Files panel within your Insight-live.com account.


What people have said about Digitalfire

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  • Just wanted to thank you for the timeline. I check for new posts every day and think it is a brilliant way for you to keep me thinking about clay and glaze chemistry.
  • Your glaze expertise is the piece of the clay puzzle that I need to relax and enjoy this artistic journey.
  • I have been browsing the ceramic materials site with some of the Bastarache articles and their links. Extremely helpful information. Thank you both you and Edouard!
  • I have visited your website for many years to get ceramic information - your website is excellent ... Thanks again for all the great info on your website - hopefully one day I can repay you for your outstanding resourse.
  • Where have I been. I could have used this site about a thousand times and would have saved myself about a thousand hours over the past years had I been aware of the remarkable information provided here.
  • Thanks for your great contribution over the years to our field of work.
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What people have said about Insight-Live

  • Let me begin by saying thank you! The resource you have provided is immensely valuable! Ive learned more from your website than I did during grad school.. jokes on me. Thank you for everything!
  • I am a big fan of your work. I want to thank you for being there when I have needed and hopefully I will be able to carry on without much input from you. I will be renewing my subsrciption soon and I extol the virtues of the program (and now the Cloud version) to everyone that will listen.
  • I'm definitely a fan, I can see how hyper-focused you are on ceramics and it's nice to learn from you, but also I like the intensity, you've been doing this for decades. I'm kind of curious if you're autistic too, your level of focus is unusual for neurotypical folk. Anyhow, thank you for your research and hard work. They have benefited me a great deal, and a lot of the things I've learned from you I haven't seen elsewhere.
  • I wish to thank you for letting people like me use the information you have on the endless glaze articles you do, for free. Yes I am embarrassed not contributing but sadly currency exchange rates makes payment at the moment way out of my league. However, should you prefer I don't use your amazing site please let me know. Again my thanks for the glaze education I am getting from you.
  • I discovered your website after trial and failure for 35 years. WOW ! The questions you have answered for me and the knowledge are immeasurable To think I am going to get past the Science and onto the Art makes me near giddy. Your site is amazing. My college age kids are going to be dazzled I did this. Every single college ceramic studio should know about your site. I want to tell them!
  • Tony, I owe you a tremendous debt of gratitude. In art school, I got a thorough grounding in ceramics -- in a macro sense. Micro, not so much. You, then, are the professor who is helping me to complete my education, via Digitalfire -- truly a Phenominal piece of work.
  • With a major in ceramics i have been working in the glaze lab of a big sanitary ware production company for about 3 years now. I want to tell you how much i appreciate the work that you do and the knowledge that you share, through out the 7 years that i have been studying and working in the Ceramics field. You have been the most important source of knowledge for me no one has ever taught me as much as you did through digitalfire. I truly love ceramics its quite a beautiful field to work in and i love and excel at what i do and big part of that is because of the guidance that you provide. And that really means alot to me to see a research or a test work out as i planned.
  • Thank you very much for your website, as a amateur Potter I find it an incredibly useful source of information about all kinds of things pottery related and when I'm trying to make glazes for example I will often refer to your website for guidance.
  • Thank you for the amazing information. I couldn’t find an online ceramics class that I could take to learn about clay and glaze chemistry, so I am thankful that I found this. Is there a way I can donate to support the site?
  • Thanks for your amazing resources at digital fire. They have been invaluable in understanding clay, as I’m getting started with ceramics. Your emphasis to focus on the chemistry has made the art of ceramic very accessible indeed.

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Blog

Cone 6 iron red with a catcher glaze

Ancient copper running stopped

This is G3948A (similar to the popular Amaco Ancient Copper product). To get this stunning result, it needs to be applied thickly. Therefore, it runs a lot. But the catcher glaze around the bottom of these mugs has stopped the flow. The catcher is a glossy black, G3914A (but Amaco Obsidian would also likely work). I have learned to put it on with the right height (about 2cm) and right thickness, and then apply wax emulsion to prevent the iron red glaze from sticking during dipping. The inside glaze, G2926B, is one I have tested and developed to fit Plainsman clay bodies as a liner.

Context: You can make your.., Souvenir mugs that demonstrate.., Catch Glaze

Thursday 15th January 2026

Converting a glossy transparent glaze to a calcium matte

A ten-minute video to give glaze nerds goose bumps!

Watch the G1214Z video to see me convert the G1214M cone 6 clear base into G1214Z cone 6 calcium matte using simple glaze chemistry and recipe logic. This first appeared in the Digitalfire desktop Insight instruction manual 30 years ago. It is an understatement to say that this process is interesting if you want to know more about glazes, their chemistry and recipe logic. Watch this video and see me adjust the recipe of my high-calcium transparent cone 6 glaze to convert it into a calcium matte. In an Insight-live.com account, the process is easy enough for anyone. We'll cut the Si:Al ratio, increase the CaO, maintain the thermal expansion for glaze fit and make the recipe shrinkage-adjustable using a mix of calcined kaolin and raw kaolin. We will even compare it with the High Calcium Semimatte from Mastering Glazes.

Context: Two cone 6 matte.., Partially and fully opacified.., A hazard of using.., Converting G1214M Cone 6..

Wednesday 7th January 2026

This GA6-B glaze is better than beer bottle glass

Beer bottle glass vs stoneware glaze

Ceramic glazes, like this GA6-B, are actually just glass. But they are not like bottle glass. The latter is formulated to work well in forming machines (harden quickly), melt and stiffen quickly, have low melt viscosity and resist milkiness and crystallization on solidification. The chemistries to accomplish this have adequate resistance to leaching and adequate durability for a few uses. A stoneware glaze melt needs to be much more viscous (to stay put on vertical surfaces). And, it must have a lower thermal expansion (to match common clay bodies). And, it must resist crystallization much more (since it cools slowly). Fortunately, meeting these needs brings along big benefits: Greater durability, hardness and resistance to leaching. Stoneware glazes and bottle glass share a common trait: They have about the same amount of SiO2. But the similarity ends there, stoneware glazes have:

-High Al2O3. Three to five times more! It is the key oxide for durable glass. And it stiffens the melt (that disqualifies high levels from bottle glass).
-The same fluxes (CaO, MgO, K2O, Na2O). But they distribute very differently (half the CaO, half to one third the KNaO, much more MgO). Other fluxes like SrO, Li2O are also common.
-Low KNaO (which they call R2O). In glazes, it produces crazing, 5% is a typical maximum. But bottle glass can have double or triple that (the high thermal expansion is not an issue, and its cheap source materials supply lots of melting power).
-B2O3 melter. It is expensive but can be justified because the glaze is just a thin layer. Glazes at the low end of the stoneware range have 5% or more boron.

Far right: A glass bottle. Left: Small test bottles made from dark and light burning stonewares. Third: A production ceramic bottle. Notice how much the dark body darkens the GA6-B glaze.

Context: 3D-printing artifacts on a.., Meet two glazes at.., Regular bottles of beer.., v7 Classic beer bottle.., Food Safe, Beer Bottle Master Mold..

Wednesday 7th January 2026

Insight-live reference recipes - Many more and much better

I have seven open side-by-side. There are hundreds of them, and all are well-documented with test results and photos. There are glazes, engobes, bodies, materials and special-purpose recipes. All of them are ones that have been shared over the past decade from our Insight-live.com account. These are great to open beside recipes you are evaluating or testing, it can be a real eye opener to see the chemistries and recipes compared.

Monday 29th December 2025

Glaze dunking videos reveal the value of thixotropy

These videos from Eastfork Pottery demonstrate their use of thixotropic glaze slurries. Watch them to see how effective a highly gelled glaze is. It enables a quick dip, stays fluid while draining, gives even coverage and dries in seconds. These don't hard-pan or settle out in the bucket either. They work on porous or dense bisque. Almost any glaze can be thixotropic if you take the time to learn how to do it. The fast drying enables the use of twin running (or twin belt) foot wiper machines (best shown on these Instagram and Facebook videos).

Context: Instagram Eastfork Pottery thixotropic.., Tiktok Eastfork Pottery thixotropic.., Facebook Eastfork Pottery thixotropic.., Eastfork Pottery, Thixotropy

Thursday 11th December 2025

Glaze cracking during drying? Wash it off and then do this.

Glaze spider web cracking on drying

If your pottery glaze is doing on drying then it will crawl during firing. Wash it off, dry the ware. Then check the water content. If the glaze has worked fine in the past then it is likely going on too thick because the specific gravity is too high - just repeat cycles of adding a little water and dip testing (make it thixotropic if needed). But that was not the issue here. Glazes need clay to suspend and harden them, but too much clay means trouble. This was Ravenscrag Slip, a clay, being used pure as a cone 10R glaze. The glaze appeared to go in perfectly and it dried to the touch in ~20 seconds. But shrinkage continues after that, revealing after a couple of minutes. Fixing the issue was a matter of adding some roasted Ravencrag Slip to the bucket. That reduced the shrinkage and therefore the cracking. Any glaze containing excessive kaolin can be fixed the same way (trade some of the raw kaolin for calcined kaolin). Some glazes that contain plenty of clay also have bentonite - a simple fix for these is to simply remove the bentonite.

Context: Calcined Kaolin, Calcination, Crawling

Friday 5th December 2025

Custer Feldspar vs Nepheline Syenite at cone 8 oxidation

Feldspar and nepheline melting

Although Nepheline Syenite and Custer Feldspar are used as effective body maturing agents and fluxes in glazes past cone 6, curiously, neither of them melt well by themselves. Thus, both of these come 6 melt fluidity tests add 20% Ferro Frit 3134 to get them flowing. This is a 2021 shipment of the feldspar and a 2022 shipment of the nepheline.

Context: Custer Feldspar, Nepheline Syenite, Casting pure nepheline syenite.., Pure nepheline syenite mug..

Thursday 27th November 2025

Low fire ware cracking during firing. Why?

Low fire ware cracking in half during firing

Most low-fire bodies contain talc. It is added for the express purpose of increasing thermal expansion. The natural quartz particles present do the same. These are good for glaze fit but bad for ware like this. There are also sudden volume changes associated with cristobalite, but it forms (from quartz) at stoneware temperatures so should not be a concern in terra cotta or a white low fire body. You could fiddle with the clay recipe or change bodies, but better to change the firing schedule. The quartz in stonewares goes through a sudden volume change between 950-1150F on the way down. Quartz particles in low fire bodies will do the same. A simple fix is to slow down the entire cooling cycle like this potter did. Or, learn to program your kiln to approach this range more slowly, then ease down through it. No electronic controller? Learn a switch-setting-schedule to approximate this down-ramp (buy a pyrometer if needed).

Context: Manually programming a Bartlett.., Dunting, Quartz Inversion, Cristobalite Inversion, Cristobalite

Sunday 23rd November 2025

Non-plastic, very stiff clay is required here

No potter could use it

Multipart metal mold jiggering machines

Potters love plastic clay. On the wheel it enables pulling larger, more overhang, thinner walled pieces. For beginners it can make the difference between success or a collapsed lump of mud. The downside is high drying shrinkage and danger of cracking. But potters know how to exercise care in drying to get success anyway.

This industrial jiggering machine has the opposite priority: Ability to hold shape immediately after forming and to dry crack-free quickly. The secret is low plasticity stiff clay (notice how it splits around the edges when flattened). Notice, in the video, how much water is used yet it does not stick to the heated metal mold. Note also how the machine avoids tearing it by applying pressure slowly right to the end. Even then, the vertical splitting on the outer belly and the crumbly way it cuts verify its poor plasticity.

Context: Video on Instragram shows..

Saturday 22nd November 2025

Thrown pieces made from pure Grolleg and EP kaolins

This is how you compare plasticities

Mugs thrown from two pure kaolins

These have just been thrown on the wheel. I find it to be a foolproof method of comparing the plasticity of two clays. They were slurried up and dewatered to about the same moisture content and the same amount was thrown to compare the size achievable. While the Grolleg is stickier and dewaters a little slower, it is not nearly as plastic as EPK (which itself is not that plastic compared to others). Curiously, New Zealand kaolin (halloysite) is quite a bit less plastic than the Grolleg but it responds to plasticity augmentation (in porcelain recipes) just as well as Grolleg (similar amounts of bentonite producing similar plasticities). And, bodies containing EPK also need about the same amount of bentonite to produce plasticity suitable for throwing large forms. So, the plasticity that a kaolin appears to have by itself is not completely indicative of what it will contribute to a body (if augmented with bentonite). The EPK used here is the darker and more plastic of the two varieties Plainsman receives.

Context: EP Kaolin, EPK fired bar top..

Wednesday 19th November 2025



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