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This base can give extremely brilliant colors; I’ve had particular success with red copper oxide. I’ve also noticed that cobalt is far less likely to felt up when used with this glaze, even when a large amount of colorant is used. Mixtures incorporating ilmenite and/or rutile work very well with this recipe, giving very large, quickly growing crystals. The crystals do not show the variation in shape one sees with the Ferro 3110 based glazes.
Step | °C | °F | Hold | Time | |
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1 | 100°C/hr to 200C | 180°F/hr to 392F | 0 | 2:02 | |
2 | 250°C/hr to 500C | 450°F/hr to 932F | 0 | 3:14 | |
3 | 500°C/hr to 1275C | 900°F/hr to 2327F | 0 | 4:47 | |
4 | 9999°C/hr to 1130C | 17998°F/hr to 2066F | 15min | 5:03 | |
5 | 30°C/hr to 1075C | 54°F/hr to 1967F | 0 | 6:53 |
With a little iridescence from post-fire raku. The green is a true emerald green and very brilliant. Crystals do form very fast, however, and I have seen them attain an entire centimeter in diameter in as little as fifteen minutes
Recipes |
GC106 - GC106 Base Crystalline Glaze
Cone 8-10 - Most other GC106 recipes are based on this. |
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Typecodes |
Oxidation Firing
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