Click here for information about DIGITALFIRE Corporation

Monthly Tech-Tip from Tony Hansen

I will send practical posts like these (from thousands I maintain). No ads or tracking. We are troubleshooting the confirm email, for now you will be subscribed immediately (the first monthly email will provide one-click unsubscribe).


Blog

First mug in my newly created mold

Slip cast mug

This test mold is thin-walled yet I can cast three thick-walled mugs in three hours. This clay is L2596G, a buff burning cone 10 stoneware - the mug on the lower right has been fired to cone 10 oxidation. Achieving 4-5mm thick walls is not a problem if the casting slip employs a large particle kaolin intended for this purpose (e.g. Opticast). The flared lip works as expected, keeping the rim nice and round. No cracks have appeared at handle joins, even for pieces left in the mold overnight. The mold halves mate with each other very well and the seam is easy to remove. The seam on the base is an issue - I have to be careful to line up the halves well before clamping the mold strap - this is a warning for accuracy during the mold production stage. And the possible motive for a three-piece mold.

Context: AI-imagined mug I chose.., Coffee Mug Slip Casting..

Wednesday 10th April 2024

Personal size sieve shakers you can buy on Amazon

Small vibrating sieve shakers

These are small-scale devices that work on the same principles as industrial ones - thus they put industrial methods of clay processing in the hands of a potter or hobbyist. These products are stainless steel and food grade and most can be used with powders or shurries and have interchangeable screens. The most expensive device here costs $5000 and the least expensive is far less than $1000. The suppliers of each of these also have other similar machines (as well as other types of processing equipment potentially valuable in small-scale ceramic production).

Context: How to Find and.., Formulating a body using.., 11 v 22 v.., 11 v 5 w.., 22 V 5 W.., 2 8V 6 HZ.., Making your own sieve..

Sunday 24th March 2024

3D printed plaster filled case mold ready for pouring block mold

3D printed mug mold

This is part of a project to make a slip-casting mold for a coffee mug. In the slicer, I split the print into two pieces 22mm up from the base. This enabled doing the bottom section right side up and the top one upside down. That drastically cut the amount of support generated (and thus printing time). I scotch-taped the two halves together and filled it with plaster to produce a rigid block mold. The two halves fit so precisely it is difficult to tell where they join. The big benefit of printing it upright like this is that the all-important front face is very flat (there is some warpage on other parts but that does not matter).

Context: Coffee Mug Slip Casting..

Wednesday 20th March 2024

3D design, printing and use of a test bar mold

SHAB mold for casting clays

This is for making test bars of slip casting clays bodies for use in the SHAB test (to measure drying shrinkage, firing shrinkage and fired porosity). I designed it in Fusion 360 and 3D printed the light-duty rails and case mold. I poured plaster into that to make the two plaster working mold halves (top right). The funnels provide a reservoir so the bars be cast solid. This mold can produce a set of three bars in less than an hour.

Context: Shrinkage/Absorption Test, Side Rails

Tuesday 19th March 2024

Lead bisilicate with his ugly borosilicate cousins at a cone 05 party

Boron and lead transparent glazes on terra cotta

The middle front mug is glazed with an 85:15 lead bisilicate:kaolin mix, the G3971 recipe. It is an absolutely "knock your socks off" crystal-clear hyper-glossy surface that transmits the terra cotta color beautifully regardless of whether the clay is smooth or coarse or the glaze thick or thin (this one was applied as a brushing glaze in three coats on L215). My lead testing kit passes it with no detectable lead release. The other pieces are done using brush-on versions of boron-based clear glazes (commercial and made from a recipe). At almost any thickness and whether on L215 or L4170B clouding occurs. The worst one is a commercial three-coater on the right, the best is G1916W (it has 2% added iron as a fining agent for the micro-bubbles). My terra cotta plan: Glaze the inside functional surfaces with that and the outsides with the leaded one (and using a kiln exhaust system).

Context: Lead Bisilicate Frit, A lead bisilicate frit.., 2 iron oxide in.., Boron blue in low.., A cure for long-time.., Is it impossible to.., Thick application clouds a.., Lead in Ceramic Glazes..

Sunday 17th March 2024

A better cone 6 oatmeal glaze using Ravenscrag Slip

Ravenscrag oatmeal glazed mug

Left: G3933EF oatmeal based on Ravenscrag Slip.
Right: G3933 oatmeal based on a mix of G2934 matte and G2926B glossy base glazes.
Both have the same added colorants. The Ravenscrag version features several advantages. Most importantly much less tendency to crawl. It has better application properties, the slurry needs less water and it is naturally thixotropic. It has an extra option for adjusting properties: Changing the ratio of roast-to-raw Ravenscrag clay. It is responsive to cooling differences - more matte on slow cool versions of the C6DHSC schedule (e.g. 150F/hr), more glossy on faster cools (e.g. 250F/hr). And, its recipe is adjustable (e.g. raising the MgO if a more persistent matte is needed). And, it looks and feels way better, interacting with dark bodies for richer color and varying in tone more for thinner and thicker sections.

Context: Ravenscrag Slip, Sometimes it is better..

Wednesday 13th March 2024

Use the same runny glaze as its own catch glaze

As runny glaze as its own catcher

This is G3948A, a super runny cone 6 iron red glaze. The clay body is M340. This glaze has to be runny, applied thickly enough, be held at temperature and cooled slowly to achieve this visual effect. When applied at the needed thickness it will run off the ware onto the kiln shelf during firing. Why has that not happened? A catcher glaze on the lower section. In this case, the catcher is the same glaze. On the left, the bottom half of the mug has just been dipped into the glaze quickly, giving a layer that is too thin to achieve the red effect. That dried within a few seconds and enabled pushing the top half down into the dipping glaze for twice as long (the inside has a liner glaze and is waxed up to the rim). The upper section glaze is guaranteed to run and the bottom is not thick enough to run. The result is complete blurring of the dividing line and coverage that looks natural and flawless.

Context: Stop a runny glaze.., Catch Glaze

Tuesday 5th March 2024

ChatGPT woke me up about making my own frits.

Frit melted in crucibles

I asked ChatGPT this question and got a very thoughtful answer that seems to confirm what I have observed in smelting material mixtures into ingots in alumina and zircon lined slip cast crucibles. The mixtures are melting well in the test crucibles (the upper one was fired at cone 4, the lower one at cone 6). But there are issues. There does appear to be phase separations. And bubble froth at the top. For some compositions alumina works better as a liner, for others zircon. We are getting closer to trying larger multi-kilogram batches and ball milling so time will tell.

Context: Crucible with alumina oxide.., AI in Ceramics

Friday 1st March 2024

Paint another layer onto a fired glaze? Yes. With CMC gum.

The cone 6 mug on the left has the G3933A glaze, applied as a dipping glaze. It turned out poorly - crawling from corners and looking thin and washed out. I made a brushing glaze version of this (which adds 1.5% CMC gum), I keep it around for this very purpose. It has a high specific gravity (unlike commercial ones that have high water contents - they will run and go on too thin if you try this). Because of the gum it dries hard, there is no shrinkage or cracking. On a second firing, using the C6DHSC schedule again, (mug on the right) the surface is transformed - thicker, more vibrant color (being picked up from the underlying body).

Context: CMC Gum, Six layers 85 Alberta.., Control gel using Veegum.., Convert a pint of..

Wednesday 28th February 2024

Iron red glaze fired at cones 6, 5 and 4

Iron red glaze at cone 6, 5, 4

These mugs are Plainsman Coffee Clay. The glaze on all three is G3948A iron red. They were fired at cone 6, 5 and 4 using the C6DHSC schedule (adjusted for top temperature). As can be seen, the red color depends on the melt fluidity achieved at cone 6.

Context: Same glaze on black.., Iron Red Glaze

Sunday 25th February 2024

Contact Me

Use the contact form at the bottom on almost all the pages on this site or let's have a together.

Other ways to Support My Work

Subscribe to Insight-Live.com. It is about doing testing and development, not letting the information slip away. Starts at $15 for 6 months.

Tony Hansen
Follow me on

Test, Document, Learn, Repeat in your account at insight-live.com

Login to your online account

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

Download for Mac, PC, Linux

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

  • First, let me thank you for creating such a wonderful, informative, and comprehensive site. I know that I will spend many a long hour pouring through your pages.
  • This is a excellent site for Ceramic colors and containing very good knowledge for Ceramic coloring agents. Thank to Digitalfire Ceramic Oxides Directory.
  • ..I want to know more about the ceramics field and I see your outfit as being the most proactive in having vital information in the field.
  • I found your site and spent a long time studying various parts of it. I intend to use it alot, and hence I probably purchase the software in due course.
  • Keep up the fantastic work!
  • DID I TELL YOU I LOVE YOU ... you made me feel so much better!!! I was stressing that I will never figure out how to resolve issues b/c it always seems like an new hurdle to get over ... thanks for that email again I feel empowered again.
  • Your site is one of the most unusual sites I have encountered since I began exploring ceramics on the web. I am a student in a 2 year pottery program, and would like nothing better than to understand glazing from the very beginning of my career as a potter...It is pretty overwhelming. To tell you the truth, you almost come off as a Southern Baptist Revival Preacher the way you rant and rave against the "Dragon." It is what got my attention, however, and I appreciate the quality of your work, but it is very overwhelming.

What people have said about Insight-Live

  • I have really been enjoying using insight.
  • Your site is the most useful of them all for material info. and more. Thank you.
  • Having explored and taken lots of advice from your site, I just wanted to say what a brilliant and informative site it is.
  • Just to let you know your wealth of information and knowledge on digitalfire is second to none and very Impressive.
  • Thank ou for this website! Your information is incredibly valuable. It is the Crown Jewel of the Online Pottery community.
  • Thanks for doing the timeline. I’ve told you before but it never hurts to say it again, this is great stuff and I get so much info from your posts. Extremely valuable!
  • Great software!



https://digitalfire.com, All Rights Reserved
Privacy Policy

1