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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

  • Am finding your website a treasure trove of extremely thoughtful writings for the aspiring more-technical studio potter. Thanks for putting it out there.
  • I am very thankful that you are so good at what you do! Thank you for all your hard work!
  • 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!
  • However I do believe you have the most comprehensive information anywhere in the world, and I would not hesitate to contact you for any information I required for Ceramic Glaze. I will also refer my associates to you if ever they require assistance.
  • I am a builder / developer / consumer of ceramic tiles. You have a sea of information on your site.
  • I just read the Magic of Fire cover to cover...I feel that a gift from heaven fell into my lap at just the right time. Two months ago I couldn't have appreciated your advice...The reality of tests too numerous to comprehend had just hit me. Your advice to establish a base glaze that is shown by testing to be well fitted,and to create variations from there seems to sensible but I didn't see it for myself. I was on my way to a workshop about commercial glazes...Armed with a new attitude, I now wonder if I need these samples?
  • I'm finding the magic of fire fantastic!
  • I've read it cover to cover (and some sections two or three times) and I wish more than ever that I had read it before the eighteen months of mixing and testing that I've done.
  • I have had previous communication with you Tony, and want to say that you do a great job. Very informative. All of my former students are aware of your expertise.
  • Your site is excellent and informative, you should conduct online conferences on various subjects, please let me know if you have one.

What people have said about Insight-Live

  • First, I want to say that I admirer your work. Your professional approach and your website are inspiring!!
  • Thanks for creating "google" for Pottery Industry. Very thoughtful presentation. I am sure thousands will be benefitted.
  • Brilliant!
  • Dear tony: Nice work keep it up!
  • Thanks for sharing your extensive knowlege with the clay community.
  • Tony, you're a gentleman and a scholar. Thanks for the information. I'm a self-taught potter living in Hansville, WA. could not have done it without your scientific approach and papers.
  • Awesome program you have!
  • Thank you for your time, and I am totally excited that I woke up to an email from Tony Hansen (I’m a big fan)
  • I love insight BTW. I have been showing everyone at Alfred how easy it is to do UMF while comparing two recipes next to each other. The up and down toggles make it easy to understand cause and effect. They are also impressed how easily i can switch between my computer and smartphone and maintain all my work and recipes. BTW I just love insight. It has changed my experience and knowledge of glazes drastically.
  • Let me be the next person to thank you for putting this amazing material together. Insight-live + Digitalfire has catapulted me up the learning curve.
March 2026: We are doing major upgrades to code here, please be patient regarding any issues. If any page is not working for a period of hours, please contact us. Thank you.

Blog

Our $50 pottery mugs vs. the $5 imports:

Do we just pretend this situation doesn't exist?

Peggy-potter makes the hand-crafted mugs. Carla-coffee-drinker, needs a mug. This apparent perfect alignment goes off the rails when Carla compares Peggy's $50 price with premium imported mugs costing $5 (shown here). Especially when the imports emulate Peggy's techniques flawlessly while offering better durability and strength!

Peggy has to choose between hyping "kiln drops" on social or cutting costs. DIY techniques and supplies are a first option. Also mold-making and slip casting, even mixing her own casting slips. Mixing her own glazes, underglazes and engobes is the next step. Or learning to use less expensive bodies (e.g. with engobes).

Going DIY is not a big equipment investment. A plaster table, scale, mixing and batching table and a propeller mixer are the most important. And keeping good records (e.g. an account at insight-live.com). Following manufacturers on Instagram to see their glazing and forming techniques can help. Build throwing and drying skills by making hundreds of the same item. Consider: What you do affects other potters, prices cannot keep rising, or there will be no market.

Context: Where do I start.., Industry can never make.., A plaster table Better.., DIY clay bodies via..

Monday 9th March 2026

A comparative glaze opacity test in a tile lab:

The way to minimize Zircon

Strips of the same glaze recipe, each containing different percentages of zircon opacifier, have been applied across both a dark-burning body and a white engobe. While it is difficult to measure the absolute degree of opacity from a photo like this, the side-by-side comparison makes differences easy to see. Tests like this demonstrate that simple visual comparisons can often be as useful as instrument measurements when evaluating glaze opacity. Colorimeters measure Lab* color values, not opacity directly. This test is really about visual hiding power, which instruments don't always capture well.

In this case the technician may be trying to determine how to achieve the required whiteness at minimum cost. Both the engobe and glaze contain zircon. The whiter the engobe the less opacifier is required in the glaze over it. Zircon is an expensive material, and reducing the total needed by even by 1% can make a significant difference in production cost.

The same test method can also be used to compare different brands of zircon opacifier in the same recipe.

A subtle aspect can be noted by coverage on the dark body: Opacity differences there become visible, whereas on the white engobe, differences almost disappear. Where an engobe is not to be used, an effective tweak is to add a thin black line under the glaze, then the lowest zircon level that hides the line becomes obvious.

Context: DIY the commercial glaze.., Opacity

Saturday 7th March 2026

Messy binders don't have a "search button"

And they hold a limited number of pages

The binder you used to keep records in. The computer and phone we should use now.

Are your records in a messy binder? Binders don't have "Search" buttons. Side-by-sides. And many DIYers would generate a binder full in a year. But how does one even start to organize?

Start by moving your recipes to an account at insight-live.com, assigning each a code number. Then, in your studio/lab, label every fired sample, bucket, jar, glaze test, bag with the corresponding code number. Upload pictures for each recipe. Enter your firing schedules. Research the solutions to issues you are facing with glazes at the Digitalfire Reference Library (ask us questions using the contact form on each of the thousands of pages there). Then start planning improvements and tests. Choose a recipe you need to improve/evolve, duplicate it, increment the code number, make changes, enter explanatory notes. With this preparation you will hit the ground running back at work.

Context: The New 2 2.., Digitalfire Insight-Live

Friday 6th March 2026

DIY the commercial glaze on mug #1:

You must consider five factors to make it work

The mug on the left, #1, is a commercial brushing glaze. It is opaque enough to cover this red-burning clay body. It shows the desired effect. That depends on the fact that opaque glazes stretch thinner on the sharp edges of incised designs. If they have enough melt mobility and are applied right, the effect is amplified. This potter is attempting to mix her own DIY equivalent as a dipping glaze, adding 4% tin oxide to a transparent base glaze in #2 and zircon (a higher percentage) in #3. As you can see, the effect is not working as well, and there are several reasons:

#2 is whiter because it uses tin oxide as the opacifier (vs. zircon, likely used in #1). #2 and #3 have less melt fluidity; the base is likely G2926B. #1 was applied by brush, the others using a dipping glaze. Matching the original involves a combination of things: A base having more flux (especially B2O3) is needed (e.g. G3806C). Careful control of application thickness. The right percentage of opacifier. And, it may be necessary to mix the DIY version as a brushing glaze, that method of application might be needed to get the careful control of thickness and thickness variation needed.

Context: A comparative glaze opacity.., Opacity, Opacifier

Thursday 26th February 2026

Step-by-step to do a formula-to-batch in Insight-Live.com

Insight-live does not automate formula-to-batch calculations, but it does assist in doing them. And it provides the tools to create an audit trail of test results, pictures and notes and a path to document subsequent adjustments. Along the way, you gain material knowledge and intuition. In this example, we derive the recipe of materials needed to source the oxide formula of a zinc clear cone 6 glaze (sourcing the oxides needed using a Ferro frit and other common raw materials). We'll create the target in a panel, start the batch in a panel beside it, supply the B2O3 from a frit and then the fluxes from feldspar, zinc and whiting. Then finish by rounding out the Al2O3 and SiO2 from kaolin and silica. The picture below shows the panels, the original target formula on the left and the final derived recipe on the right. The derived transparent glaze is on the inside of the mug and the outside is G3875, another zinc clear with iron and chrome added to produce the orange.

Context: How to choose ceramic.., Click here for case-studies.., A formula to batch..

Thursday 19th February 2026

Here is why Albany Slip was hard to use: Crawling

This glaze is 85% Albany Slip and 20% Ferro Frit 3195. These bisque tiles were dipped in a brushing glaze version of it (just water and powder). The glaze is applied quite thin on the front tile and thicker on the back one. The material gelled slurries and required a lot of water to make them thin enough to use. For assured success, this or any glaze that had a high percentage required mixing the raw Albany Slip with a calcined Albany Slip (which people had to make on their own).

Context: Albany Slip, Melt fluidity and coverage.., Shrinking glaze peeling glaze.., Six layers 85 Alberta.., Crawling

Wednesday 18th February 2026

Multilayer crawling

Oil-spot effects depend on being able to layer glazes. Normally, a black underneath and matte white over top. Using dipping glazes is obviously advantageous for this type of piece; the second dip covers the other half and creates the double layer needed. But dipping glazes contain clay in the recipe (almost always kaolin or ball clay), it satisfies multiple needs: It suspends the slurry, hardens the drying glaze, and supplies critical Al2O3 to the chemistry. The upper glaze here is a matte; so it needs extra Al2O3, which means it likely has extra clay. 20% kaolin (non-plastic like EPK, Grolleg, NZ) is about the maximum or the glaze will shrink too much when drying. If extra Gerstley Borate is added, then it will be worse. Drying cracks are the result when the fragile body-bond of the lower one fails to withstand the stresses of being rewetted and tugged upon by the upper layer being applied and drying. When the cracked double-layer begins to melt, it pulls itself into islands, leaving bare body between. That is called "crawling".

How to prevent this. Be smart about glaze layering and use recipe logic. The lower black can likely be adjusted to be a first coat dipping glaze. The clay content in the upper white one can be adjusted to reduce drying shrinkage (by splitting it between raw and roasted/calcined powder, or by using a clay having lower plasticity).

Context: Glaze Layering, Crawling

Tuesday 17th February 2026

Tile stacking in an electric kiln - Fingers crossed!

Small-scale operations everywhere are making tile like this. Most use plastic clay intended for pottery, which introduces more drying shrinkage, complicating drying them flat. Stacking them in the kiln can be a game of chance. Stacked too tightly and they crack (mostly because of quartz inversion). Stacked to loosely and most of the energy goes into heating the shelves and stackers. Using a clay with minimal large quartz particles is the best way to avoid dunting, however that is also a balance since such clays are more difficult to fit glazes to (without crazing).

Context: Tile having angular shape.., An unevenly cooled tile.., It possible to make.., A plastic pottery clay..

Tuesday 17th February 2026

Stains are better in black DIY glazes

Use 5% stain instead of 15% metal oxides

Make your own black glaze

Consider the hazards and hassles before choosing a black matte or gloss recipe that has high individual or combined percentages of manganese dioxide, cobalt or nickel.

Gloss blacks: These are super popular as the base for layering of reactive glazes. DIY dipping versions thus make a lot of sense. They make even more sense when they don’t turn to jelly in the bucket because of the high percentage of red iron oxide in all blacks made using metal oxide colorants. And when the total percentage of pigment is as high, or higher than 15%. And when the pigments cause crystallization (especially when overloaded).

Matte blacks: The human eye can detect even slight differences in the degree of matteness (which is very difficult to keep consistent). Raw metal oxides affect the matteness, especially when overloaded with pigment. They are prone to cutlery marking if too matte. By using stains, manufacturers and even potters have learned to tune recipes (lower left) and firing schedules to achieve consistency and functionality (even tourist souvenirs (lower right) feature them now). With stains, only one material is producing the color, its percentage (which can be as low as 4%) can be tuned.

Context: Ceramic Stain Toxicity Label.., Two cone 6 black.., Heres evidence that using.., Ceramic Stain, Toxicity

Monday 16th February 2026

A plastic pottery clay for rolling ceramic tile:

Not a crazy idea when it can do what this can!

This is the dolomite body recipe L4410P (a development version of Plainsman Snow). It is monoporosa tile on steroids; this body has zero percent firing shrinkage at cone 04! Predicting the final size and keeping that size consistent is much easier with such bodies. I have measured its drying shrinkage as 6% (doing our standard SHAB test). The final size needed is 20.5 cm square. Thus, I calculate the cut size to be 20.5 / (100 - 0.06) = 21.8 cm (or 20.5 / 0.94 = 21.8 cm). To keep these flat, we put them between sheets of drywall; the process takes 2-3 days. Since no change in size occurs during firing, this body has another big advantage: Tiles stay flatter during firing (a major problem with tile production). While making wall tile using a plastic pottery body is not something for industry (especially because of the space requirements for drying), for artisans working on a small scale, a body made by mixing super plastic ball clay with dolomite produces amazing working and tactile properties. The bonus is that they work so well at low temperatures, where there are so many glazing options.

Context: Monoporosa or Single Fired.., QRCode mounted on Plainsman.., Tile stacking in an.., Tile that is actually.., Ceramic Tile

Sunday 15th February 2026



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