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#1
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Fun with Texture
I mainly make functional stoneware pieces fired to ^6 in an electric
kiln. I want to experiment with some fun textering and embedding and was looking for ideas. For example, I know a potter who occasionally fires some pieces wrapped in gauze and has even done a couple of pieces where she wrapped slip dipped gauze around a balloon, popped the balloon when slip was dry and fired the piece like that. So, if you have any fun ideas please share :-) LMac |
#2
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I mainly make functional stoneware pieces fired to ^6 in an electric kiln. I want to experiment with some fun textering and embedding and was looking for ideas. For example, I know a potter who occasionally fires some pieces wrapped in gauze and has even done a couple of pieces where she wrapped slip dipped gauze around a balloon, popped the balloon when slip was dry Not-too-well mixed slip applied is nice. Cheesecloth dipped in slip. Extrusions from the little tiny hand-held extruders. Textured and torn pieces applied. Linda D |
#3
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"Lcdumas" wrote in message ... I mainly make functional stoneware pieces fired to ^6 in an electric kiln. I want to experiment with some fun textering and embedding and was looking for ideas. For example, I know a potter who occasionally fires some pieces wrapped in gauze and has even done a couple of pieces where she wrapped slip dipped gauze around a balloon, popped the balloon when slip was dry Not-too-well mixed slip applied is nice. Cheesecloth dipped in slip. Extrusions from the little tiny hand-held extruders. Textured and torn pieces applied. Linda D Lace too, I have not done it but apparently cotton lace works best. I have some lace that I bought to do this with, but just haven't yet. ) |
#4
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On Wed, 28 Jan 2004 15:01:10 -0500, Lindsay MacArthur
wrote: I mainly make functional stoneware pieces fired to ^6 in an electric kiln. I want to experiment with some fun textering and embedding and was looking for ideas. For example, I know a potter who occasionally fires some pieces wrapped in gauze and has even done a couple of pieces where she wrapped slip dipped gauze around a balloon, popped the balloon when slip was dry and fired the piece like that. So, if you have any fun ideas please share :-) LMac The latest Ceramics Monthly (Feb 2004) has some gorgeous texture pieces by Daphne Hatcher. She takes slabs of clay into the woods near her studio and presses them onto tree bark, then hand-builds with them. I've actually been thinking about something like this for quite a while. I want to get impressions from trees that are not nearby, and would require hiking to get to them, but I haven't decided on the best way to do this. I'm thinking of something like thin plastic freezer containers that would fit into a backpack, each one holding a slab of clay, or maybe a couple separated by something soft. Then when I get home, the clay patterns could be copied in plaster for transfer to other pieces. Or maybe wrap the clay around a drum to make a big roulette. Or bisque it and use for sprig molding the texture as a thin sheet that could be applied to something else. Lots of possibilities, once the texture itself is handy. Bob Masta dqatechATdaqartaDOTcom D A Q A R T A Data AcQuisition And Real-Time Analysis www.daqarta.com |
#6
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What about embedding---both things that burn off as well as things
that stay in the piece? What items have people experimented with? On Wed, 28 Jan 2004 15:01:10 -0500, Lindsay MacArthur wrote: I mainly make functional stoneware pieces fired to ^6 in an electric kiln. I want to experiment with some fun textering and embedding and was looking for ideas. For example, I know a potter who occasionally fires some pieces wrapped in gauze and has even done a couple of pieces where she wrapped slip dipped gauze around a balloon, popped the balloon when slip was dry and fired the piece like that. So, if you have any fun ideas please share :-) LMac |
#7
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Something that makes a nice surface is to embed hamster litter into the clay
and then let it burn out in the kiln. Linda D |
#8
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Is hamster litter similar to wood shavings?
On 30 Jan 2004 02:50:40 GMT, (Lcdumas) wrote: Something that makes a nice surface is to embed hamster litter into the clay and then let it burn out in the kiln. Linda D |
#9
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#10
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Lcdumas wrote: Something that makes a nice surface is to embed hamster litter into the clay and then let it burn out in the kiln. Linda D But isn't it bad for your electric kiln to create all this smoke in it? It's ok if you fire with gas or oil, but i was told, not to do it in an electric kiln. Monika -- Monika Schleidt www.schleidt.org/mskeramik |
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