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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

  • Your web site is wonderful. You guys are my knight-in-shinning-armor to slay that dragon. Learned more about glaze chemistry on your web page than in a graduate program at RISD.
  • Many Solution Regarding Ceramic Problems Got From Your Website.Thank You Very Much.
  • Your Magic of fire was a waker upper, had to read it a few times this past few months just to give my head a shake. Yes, I am having crazing issues, and its past time to get away from Gerstly Borate. Just purchased numerous frits and actual commercial stains. After 30 years in the biz, I am going to do this!
  • I have found the glaze information on your site really helpful for quite some time now. I like the way that there is an emphasis on problem solving and understanding how things work, rather than just offering recipes that might work.
  • Again, thanks for building a website that has been very influential in how I look at ceramics in general, and that has been such a valuable resource to my work as a student, production potter, and chemist.
  • I have not been pottery long and I have decided to try to make my own glazes. Your web site is great. I like your cone 6 base glaze.
  • I, personally, think Digital Fire's contribution to potters, and the Ceramic industry as a whole, is absolutely awesome, and I thank the gods there are people like you who have the knowledge and energy to provide us simple artist/educators with such exceptional tools.
  • You guys blow my mind with all your information. It is very much appreciated. I read it, sometimes 5 times, I don't always get it. Thanx!!
  • First of all, I want you to know what an incredible resource your work has been for me the past several years.
  • I really enjoy the information you have on your website ... it is the best I have seen on the internet ... I appreciated your help on using and creating slips and adjusting base glazes.

What people have said about Insight-Live

  • You are brilliant .. You have provided so much info that is great. I have been a full time potter for 44 years and am still learning. Thank you so much for your generosity in sending this very pertinent information to me. It certainly has me thinking I should sign on to Digital Fire. Thanks again.
  • I work at a small, but rapidly growing custom slip-cast studio. The first few years were a learning curve gauntlet that, in retrospect, I am surprised we exited intact. This preface is to give a sense of how in debt I am to your research and hard work. I have had to learn as I go along, and the information you provide at digitalfire.com has been indispensable, and, quite frankly, an excellent cover for my ignorance on countless occasions! It is also the only source of information about many ceramics topics that I feel I can trust, knowing that it has been backed up with careful consideration and testing. Thank you again.
  • I have longed admired your website, and everything you've contributed to better understanding ceramic technology.
  • If you didn’t know yet (most people don’t really express how they feel so I’m talking on behalf of the whole pottery community), you have become our most trusted & valuable ‘all things pottery’ resource. Thank you for your time, and the wisdom you share with all of us. I’m a humble newbie and i want to tell you how much I rely on the information you post and how much I appreciate everything you do. I want to name you ‘the clay angel!’.
  • Thank you for your incredible library of information. I have a background in QA (Six Sigma) and Biology so I genuinely appreciate the information you've made easily accessible.
  • Your Digital Fire is so important in this community!
  • I just wanted to express my appreciation for digital fire. It's an invaluable resource that I've been using since I was 18 years old (more than a decade). Keep up the amazing work.
  • Hey Tony, thanks so much for developing such a useful software. I have come to digital fire for countless questions I have had with clay and glazes.
  • I am truly grateful for the remarkable resource you have built for the community.
  • You've done it again. While looking up info on dolomite I got to your info about using a catch glaze. It could save a lot of kiln shelves if I can convince students it's worthwhile. Also, you just have the best info available on all things ceramic. Thanks for sharing it so freely
May 2026: We are continuing a major code rewrite. Please contact us if you find issues. Thank you.

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Blog

Here is what dipping engobes can do:

Go on even, in one coat, stay put

When you learn to make and use engobes correctly, they make magic possible. Here I am turning a dark body into a white one (rear mugs) and a white body into a dark one (front). The engobes have been applied at the leather-hard stage. That is the perfect time, the engobe and body are clays, designed to fit each other; they dry together and fire together creating an inseparable bond.

Handles have been applied, and they have dried to stiff leather hard. Engobe was poured in, poured out, then the mugs were pressed, lip down, into it and extracted. No dwell time was needed. This dipping engobe is DIY thixotropic (not available commercially anywhere). That means I tuned it just before use, to just the right degree of gel for perfect application. Honestly, these are a beauty to behold at this stage, the silky, drip-free surface is just so perfect.

Context: How to make the.., Here s how we.., Stained engobes can be..

Thursday 21st May 2026

Add 6% lithium carbonate to an Alberta Slip glaze:

And this happens!

Alberta slip + lithium carbonate glaze

Left is G3933A, it is an 80:20 mix of our matte and glossy cone 6 base recipes (plus a mix of iron oxide, tin oxide and rutile). The body is Plainsman Coffee Clay. Because of repeated issues with crawling a project was started to create the same effect using Alberta Slip to supply as much of the chemistry as possible. Along that road, the opportunity arose to add lithium (to duplicate Amaco PC-32, a classic Albany/Lithium recipe). That is the glaze on the mug on the right, G3933G1, it has 6% lithium carbonate. Lithium is a super powerful melter, turning this into a very reactive glaze! To make a 500ml jar of brushing glaze, in 2023, required about $7 worth of lithium carbonate.

Context: Lithium Carbonate, GA6-G, Oatmeal glazed mugs, Amaco achieves the stunning.., Recognize these universal oxidation..

Wednesday 13th May 2026

Covia Nepheline Syenite (from Canada):

Here is what it does from cone 3 down to 05

Covia nepheline syenite melting

These SHAB test fired bars are 95% nepheline syenite (5% Veegum added). By cone 02 (bar stamped #4) is self-glazing and glass-like with a total shrinkage (plastic to fired) of 15% (less than some porcelains). At cone 03 (the #5 bar) the porosity is 3% (a stoneware). This is not an absolute indication of the materials' melting profile because of the Veegum, it behaves as a powerful flux and melting catalyst.

The Blue Mountain nepheline syenite deposit in Havelock, Ontario, is a major, high-purity industrial mineral source mined since 1955 for glass, ceramics, and filler applications. This 99% pure, iron-poor deposit consists of albite, microcline, and nepheline. It has less than 0.1% free SiO2 and Fe2O3! The deposit is approximately 400 feet deep.

Context: Covia Nepheline Syenite

Tuesday 12th May 2026

Bisque temperature can make a big difference with fitting glaze at low fire

Two clear-glazed tiles, one crazed, the other not

This is Plainsman Buffstone with G2931L glaze fired at cone 06. A hotter bisque not only produces a stronger body but also eliminates crazing (these specimens were glaze-fired one month ago). Firing the bisque just one cone hotter has transformed the ceramic into a denser matrix having a higher thermal expansion. That has the power to put the squeeze on the glaze, preventing it from crazing. Hotter bisque temperatures can be problematic as they reduce bisque absorbency (thus lengthening dip and drying time for the glaze slurry). But for low-temperature hobby ware this is not as much of a problem since glazes are gummed and dry slowly anyway. They are multi-coated for this reason (these were applied in two coats).

Context: Earthenware, Bisque

Monday 11th May 2026

These two transparent glazes are opposites:

In melt fluidity and surface tension

Melt flow test demonstrates surface tension

This cone 04 flow tester compares two commercial low-fire transparent glazes. Their different chemistry strategies are revealed by the shape of these melt flows. While 3825B appears to have the higher melt fluidity, it also has much higher surface tension. This is evident in the narrow, rope-like stream and the way the flow meets the runway at a high angle before pulling into a rounded bead. A, by contrast, spreads and wets the runway, meandering downward in a broad, flat and relatively bubble-free river.

This difference is important in low-fire ware because these glazes must pass far more gases and bubbles than high-temperature glazes. The lower surface tension of A aids bubble release and healing after bubbles break. A is Amaco LG-10. B is Crysanthos SG213 (Spectrum 700 behaves similarly, although flowing less). Both approaches have advantages and disadvantages and are worth testing in your application.

Context: Ulexite, High and low melt.., Surface tension differences between.., The perfect storm of.., Surface Tension, Melt Fluidity, Transparent Glazes, Terra Cotta, Glaze Blisters, Clouding in Ceramic Glazes..

Sunday 10th May 2026

The ultimate testing instrument to measure plasticity:

A potter's wheel. With an experienced potter.

Two freshly thrown mugs made from pure Lincoln 60 fireclay

The left two leather-hard mugs were made from a 100% Lincoln 60 Fireclay (from Gladding McBean). By itself, the clay matures into a stoneware at around cone 8. While the pure material has a pleasant, smooth, soapy feel and can be thrown on the wheel, the plasticity is lower than that of typical pottery clay. The mug on the right adds 2% bentonite. That simple addition transforms it into a delight to throw! And only increases the drying shrinkage by about 0.5%.

Numbers on data sheets simply do not convey the difference the bentonite makes. But an experienced potter can feel it immediately. That makes a potters wheel (and throwing experience) a valuable laboratory testing instrument for a comparative assessment like this. There is no absolute measure for plasticity, so we most often simply say that one body is more or less plastic than another.

Context: Lincoln 60 Fireclay, A typical clay lab.., Plasticity

Saturday 9th May 2026

How to make the engobe on the left run less?

Add water! Then make it thixotropic.

The white slip on the left, L3685Z2, (applied to a leather hard cup) is dripping downward from the rim (even though it was held upside down for a couple of minutes!). Yet that slurry was very viscous with a 1.48 specific gravity. Why? Because it was not thixotropic. The fix? I watered it down to 1.46 (making it runny) and added pinches of powdered Epsom salts (while mixing vigorously) until it thickened enough to stop motion in about 1-2 seconds on mixer shut-off. But that stop-motion is followed by a bounce-back. That is the thixotropy. It is easy to overdo the Epsom salts (gelling it too much), I add a drop or two of Darvan to rethin it if needed. When the engobe is right, it gels after about 10 seconds of sitting, so I can stir it, dip and extract the mug, shake to drain it and then it gels and holds in place. Keep in mind, this is a pottery project. In industry, they deflocculate engobes to reduce water content. But a deflocculated slurry can still be thixotropic.

Context: Epsom Salts, Creating a Non-Glaze Ceramic.., Here is what dipping.., Thixotropy, Rheology, Engobe, Uneven Glaze Coverage

Saturday 9th May 2026

Here is why Gillespie Borate crawls some glazes

Gillespie Borate crawls glazes because of this

This is a variation on the 50:30:20 cone 6 very fluid-melt pottery glaze recipe. I reduced the Gillespie Borate (GB) to 37% instead of the original 50% (thus bringing the B2O3 from 0.63 down to 0.5). My objective was to reduce the melt fluidity. But the crawling was so bad in this that it is almost unusable. The reason was not obvious until I fired a sample to 1550F and 1650F. At the former, the integrity of the glaze layer is great, but by 1650F it melts suddenly and does this. It is not difficult to see why these “puzzle pieces” with curled up edges might pull inward to create "glaze islands" characteristic of glaze crawling. This is happening even though the percentage of Gillespie Borate is lower. Not surprisingly, Ulexite mineral, which GB almost certainly contains, is also known for suddenly shrinking and melting.

I tried to solve another problem at the same time. GB is plastic on its own, and thus hardens the layer and suspends slurries well. Thus, the 15% kaolin in the recipe unnecessarily increases the drying shrinkage. So I substituted calcined kaolin. While it helped with that problem that was small consolation.

Context: Gillespie Borate, Gerstley Borate vs Gillespie.., Gillespie Borate is doing..

Thursday 30th April 2026

Instagram is just your street sign.

But your website is the studio!

Yes, it is still possible to host a WordPress website on a 1GB Amazon EC2 free-tier server instance. But the method is new: ChatGPT answers every question, takes you step-by-step. A domain (e.g. mypottery.com for as little as $5) is yours and signals permanence, confidence. Instagram is built for quick scrolling, followers are "rented attention". But your website content stays where you put it, no algorithm decides who sees your work. It can explain, tell a story for each piece, teach, organize and classify. It can tell search engines what search terms you want to be found for (e.g. “pottery classes near me”). People can discover you. Install the Stripe and a shipping plugin in WordPress and your site can take orders, calculate shipping, make invoices, collect payment, provide tracking. And, a website lets you collect emails and contact and notify people directly.

This picture, made completely by ChatGPT, shows how ready it is to help you. I recommend manual server configuration (Apache/Nginx, MySQL, PHP) following its instructions. It will also help you with server updates, security patches, and database management.

Context: An entire website created.., WordPress

Thursday 30th April 2026

Joining rules are different

When clay is soft and plastic

This woman has quickly laid coils of smooth plastic clay on top of each other, in a conical shape. Then she simply begins throwing, centering, compressing and even verticaling the walls on the first pull. Since joining stiffer grogged clay elements, as done in typical hand-building, can be a time-consuming, elaborate process, how can this potter just ignore that?

-The clay is very soft, but very plastic (evident in how the coils are rolled, how the potter dangles the coils like a rope, yet they don’t break, and that she can make such large pieces).
-The coils are rolled on a wet table by a helper, then laid in place while still slip-covered and sticky (it glues them together on contact).
-The piece being made is large and the walls are thick. Asian potters are not averse to doing alot of trimming to thin them later.
-The mere act of applying pressure and thinning the wall also joins the coils.

Watch her do this on the Instagram video link on the home page for this post.

Context: The incredible plasticity of.., Tandoor Oven making How.., Video Throwing a large.., Clay Stiffness, Plasticity

Tuesday 28th April 2026



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