2011 clay workshop handbook
Transcription
2011 clay workshop handbook
ceramic arts dail y.org 2011 clay workshop handbook knowledge and techniques for the studio This special report is brought to you with the support of Georgies Ceramic and Clay Co. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org i 2011 Clay Workshop Handbook Knowledge and Techniques for the Studio Welcome to your ceramic workshop! Whether you’re a wheel thrower, a handbuilder, a glaze-testing geek, or all of the above, we’re sure you’ll discover an exciting technique or project on these pages to take into your own pottery studio and make your own. Pottery workshops have become a very popular way to learn about ceramics, because a lot of pottery making techniques can be demonstrated in a relatively short period of time. Presented here on the pages of the 2011 Ceramic Workshop Handbook are some of the most popular types of techniques and information people go to ceramic workshops to learn. So if you can’t get to a ceramic workshop in person, the Ceramic Workshop Handbook will bring the pottery workshop into your own clay studio. Enjoy your workshop! Expanding Your Palette in Mid-range Firing by Yoko Sekino-Bové A research project that began as a personal exploration ended with a system for testing glazes that opened up a full view of the possibilities in color, surface, and texture at cone 6 using almost any base glaze recipe. Treasure for Treasure: Lidded Box by Martha Grover Porcelain is a great material for creating delicate forms for culinary treasures. Four Ways to Red by Dave Finkelnburg One of the most difficult colors to achieve in ceramics may not be as tough as you thought—as long as you choose the right method for your work. All About Iron by John Britt Iron can be many things, and many colors—many of which are not brown. Throwing Agateware by Michelle Erickson and Robert Hunter Mix it up. Stack and wedge different colored clays together to create thrown forms with dramatic patterns. Cover (from left to right): Guillermo Cuellar, Shafer, Minnesota. Photo: Dennis Chick; Victoria Christen, Portland, Oregon; Lisa Grahner. Photo: Gunter Binsack, copyright Kahla/Thüringen Porcelain LLC. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 1 Expanding Your Palette in Mid-range Firing by Yoko Sekino-Bové There are so many wonderful books, websites and even software that feature spectacular glaze formulas; so one may wonder why this article should be introduced to you. The focus of this research was to establish a comprehensive visual library for everyone. Rather than just providing the reader with a few promising glaze formulas, this reference is a guideline. Because it is a guide, there are some test tiles that do not provide immediate use other than the suggestion of what to avoid, or the percentages of certain chemicals that exceed the safe food-serving level, etc., but I believe that this research will be a good tool for those who wish to experiment with, and push the boundaries of, mid-range firing. Many people may be thinking about switching their firing method from high-fire to mid-range. For instance, students who recently graduated and lost access to school gas kilns, people with a day job and those who work in their garage studios, or production potters who are concerned about fuel conservation and energy savings. This reference is intended as a tool for those people to start glaze experimentations at mid-range that can be accomplished with minimal resources. There is no guarantee that this chart will work for everyone everywhere, since the variety between the different resources overwhelmingly affects the results, but by examining a few glazes in this chart you can speculate and make informed adjustments with your materials. This is why all the base glazes for this research use only simple materials that are widely available in the US. Five years ago, when I was forced to switch to mid-range oxidation firing with an electric kiln, from gas-fueled reduction firing at high temperatures, most of my hard-earned knowledge in high-fire glazes had to be re-examined. Much to my frustration, many earth metal colorants exhibited completely different behaviors in oxidation firing. Also, problems in adhesion were prominent compared to high-fire glazes. The role of oxides and carbonates used for texturing and opacifying were different as well. But compiling the available glazes and analyzing them were not enough. I felt there should be a simple chart with visual results that explained how the oxides and carbonates behave within this firing range. This motivated me to write a proposal for glaze mid-range research to the McKnight Foundation, which generously sponsors a three-month artist-in-residence program at the Northern Clay Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Most of the tests presented in these experiments were executed at the Northern Clay Center from October to December in 2009 using clay and dry materials available at Continental Clay Co. The rest of the tests were completed after my residency at my home studio in Washington, Pennsylvania. For those tests, I used dry materials available from Standard Ceramics Supply Co. Test Conditions Clay body: Super White (cone 5–9) a white stoneware body for mid-range, commercially available from Continental Clay Co. Bisque firing temperatures: Cone 05 (1910°F, 1043°C), fired in a manual electric kiln for approximately 10 hours. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 2 recipes N501 Transparent, glossy, and crackles Cone 5 Ferro Frit 3110. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90% EPK Kaolin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 100% N502 Transparent and glossy Cone 5 Gillespie Borate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30% F-4 Feldspar. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 EPK Kaolin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Silica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 100% See chart on page 8 for test results. N503 Opaque, glossy, and textured Cone 5 Gillespie Borate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52.6% EPK Kaolin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21.0 Silica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26.4 100.0% Add:Zircopax. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.0% N504 Semi-opaque, semi-satin with textures Cone 5 Whiting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.5 % Ferro Frit 3124. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44.5 F-4 Feldspar. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.0 Zinc Oxide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.5 Bentonite*. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.5 EPK Kaolin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.0 Silica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.0 100.0% Add:Zircopax. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.0 % N505 Satin, Opaque with textures Cone 5 Dolomite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12% Gillespie Borate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Wollastonite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Ferro Frit 3124. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Cornwall Stone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 EPK Kaolin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 100% Add:Magnesium Carbonate . . . . . . . 6% See chart on page 8 for test results. * Bentonite is typically listed as an addition to recipes, but in larger amounts it contributes appreciably to the amount of alumina and silica in the recipe and is therefore included along with the clays in the list of the main ingredients. While the test results with all colorant options are shown for two recipes in this article, charts showing all of the test results for all of the recipes listed here are available at www.ceramicsmonthly.org. Click the “CM Master Class” link on the right side of the page to see the “Expanding your Palette” post and all of the research. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 3 Glaze base N502 with coloring oxides and carbonates 0.1% 0.5% 1.0% 5.0% 10.0% N502CC05 N502CC10 N502CC50 N502ROI05 N502ROI10 N502ROI50 N502COX0 N502COX05 N502COX10 N502CH01 N502CH05 N502CH10 N502MD05 N502MD10 N502MD50 N502BN05 N502BN10 N502BN50 N502IC05 N502IC10 N502IC50 N502R05 N502R10 N502Y05 N502Y10 Glaze base N504 with coloring oxides and carbonates 0.1% 0.5% 1.0% 5.0% 10.0% N502CC100 N504CC05 N504CC10 N504CC50 N504CC100 N502ROI100 N504ROI05 N504ROI10 N504ROI50 N504ROI100 N504COX01 N504COX05 N504COX10 N504CH01 N504CH05 N504CH10 N504MD05 N504MD10 N504MD50 N504MD100 N504BN05 N504BN10 N504BN50 N502IC100 N504IC05 N504IC10 N504IC50 N504IC100 N502R5 N502R100 N504R05 N504R10 N504R50 N504R100 N502Y50 N502Y100 N504Y05 N504Y10 N504Y50 N504Y100 Copper Carbonate Red Iron Oxide (regular) Cobalt Oxide Chrome Oxide Manganese Dioxide N502MD100 Black Nickel Oxide Iron Chromate Rutile (powder) Yellow Ochre The full chart of glazes and colorant combinations tested is available at www.ceramicsmonthly.org. Just click on the “CM Master Class” link on the right-hand side. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 4 Glaze firing temperatures: The coloring metals increment tests (page 50) were fired to cone 5 (2210°F, 1210°C) in a manual electric kiln for approximately 8 hours. The opacifier/texture metals increment tests (page 51) were fired to cone 5 in an automatic electric kiln for 8 hours. Glaze batch: Each test was 300g, with a tablespoon of epsom salts added as a flocculant. Glazing method: Hand dipping. First dip (bottom half): 3 seconds. Second dip (top half) additional 4 seconds on top of the first layer, total 7 seconds. Coloring Metals Increment Chart Please note that some of the oxides and carbonates in this test exceed the safety standard for use as tableware that comes in contact with food. Check safety standards before applying a glaze with a high percentage of metal oxides to food ware and test the finished ware for leaching. Test tile numbering system: The glaze name is the first part of the identification number, followed by an abbreviation or code that stands for the colorant name. The last part is a two or three digit number referring to the percentage of colorant added. So, for example if a test was mixed with glaze base N501, to which 1 percent cobalt oxide was added, the test tile marking would be: N501COX10. Conclusion The following colorants were tested: black nickel oxide, cobalt oxide, copper carbonate, chrome oxide, iron chromate, manganese dioxide, red iron oxide, rutile, and yellow ochre. You should note that tests with cobalt oxide and chrome oxide in high percentages were not executed due to the color predictability. Other blank tiles on the chart are because either the predictability or the percentages of oxides are too insignificant to affect the base glazes. Depending on firing atmospheres, manganese dioxide exhibits a wide variety of colors. When fired in a tightly sealed electric kiln with small peepholes, the glaze color tends toward brown, compared to purple when fired in a kiln with many and/or large peepholes. This group of tests has been a great opportunity for me to study the characteristics of oxides and carbonates and how they behave at mid-range temperatures. There are scientific methods for calculating glazes and proven theories, but there are many small pieces of information that can only be picked up when you actually go through the physical experiments. It is important for us to become familiar with a glaze’s behavior so that we can better utilize it. Key to that is learning both the theory and application. It is my hope that these tests will benefit many potters by helping them to expand their palette and inspire them to test the possibilities. Yoko Sekino-Bové is an artist living in Washington, Pennsylvania. She would like to thank the McKnight Foundation and the Northern Clay Center and its supporting staff for making this research possible. Glaze Base N502 with Opacifiers 1.0% 5.0% 10.0% Tin Oxide N502CT10 N502CT50 N502CT100 Titanium Dioxide N502CTD10 N502CTD50 N502CTD100 N502CZ10 N502CZ50 N502CZ100 Opacifiers were added to glaze base N502 in increments. The chart at left shows which materials were added for this purpose, and the percentages tested. All glazes in this test batch also had 1% copper carbonate added to increase the visual effect of the chemicals on the glaze. Note: Some of the oxides and carbonates did not exhibit a significant visual effect by themselves. However, sometimes a combination of more than one chemical can change the glaze characteristics and create spectacular visual effects. Zircopax 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 5 Treasure for Treasure: Lidded Box by Martha Grover When in use, Martha Grover’s porcelain butter boxes combine two things that were once scarce and are still considered delicacies. Butter has always been a staple part of my cooking process and has a long history as a delicacy as well as a sign of the good life. From pie crusts and pastries to sauces and atop warm bread, it enamors the tastes of all. Sources of fat were historically treasured because of their limited supply. The historical importance of butter reminds me of porcelain’s historical importance and rarity. How fitting then, to store one precious good inside another, to make an elegant but functional porcelain box for this culinary treasure. Though I created this lidded form for butter, the design can be adapted for many different uses by changing the height, width or scale. I make all of my work from a high-fire Grolleg porcelain. Pieces begin on the wheel and are thrown without a bottom. I then alter the shape and attach a slab bottom to finish the piece. As I combine throwing with soft-slab techniques, the clay needs to be soft enough to manipulate but firm enough to support itself and not make fingerprints. Making the Parts When working on a lidded form like this, I make all of the parts at the same time so that when assembly of the piece begins, everything is at the same consistency—just before the leather-hard stage. Both the lid and the body are bottomless cylinders, ribbed free of throwing lines and excess slurry. The body has straight walls and a lid seat about ¾ to 1 inch below the rim. The lid’s walls have a slight taper, wider at the top and narrower at the bottom. The wider rim of this part sits on the seat inside of the body of 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 6 1 2 The tools and parts needed to make the lidded container. 4 Cut the bottom at a bevel and establish four raised feet. 5 Use a soft brush to smooth and join the interior seams. Cut a bottom slab wider than the body. Make decorative points over the feet. 3 Slip and score both parts and use registration marks to realign. 6 Compress and taper the edge of the bottom slab. and width of the piece. Use these indicators to cut an undulating scallop pattern, establishing four feet on the bottom of the form (figure 2). The cuts are made at a 45° bevel and curve up to ½ inch from the bottom edge at their apex. The angle will slope down from the interior edge to the exterior. This bevel is important because it allows the slab bottom to make a gentle curve and transition more smoothly than if the edge was cut flat. Make a slab for the bottom that is approximately ¾ inch wider all the way around than the body. Center the slab on the upside down body and press it down gently using a rib directly over the To thin a slab without using a rolling pin, you can start walls. This makes an impression of the walls on the slab, showing with a ball of clay, flatten it with the palm of your hand and then, lifting it with both hands, toss it at an angle where to slip and score. Make a small register mark on the body on an absorbent table surface, or canvas covered table. and the slab so it’s easier to realign the parts. Then, remove the slab and apply a generous layer of joining slip (see recipe) on the slab and the body and score both surfaces. I find that I get a better join when using slip first then scoring because it drives the Repeat this process, rotating the slab as you go to thin it to the slip further into the clay parts. Using the registration marks made desired consistency. These parts and a few simple tools are all that earlier, realign the slab on top of the upside down body (figure 3). Then, rib the slab directly over the body wall to join the parts. are needed to get started (figure 1). Working with the body right side up on the banding wheel, use a moistened, soft, nylon-bristle brush to smooth out the interior and exterior seams and completely join the two parts With the body of the form upside down on a banding wheel, (figure 4 ). make four indicator marks on the edge that bisect the length the box; therefore, the exterior diameter should be about ¼ inch smaller than the interior diameter of the body. The slabs used to complete the body and lid are hand “thrown” to ¼ inch thickness and ribbed to compress and smooth both surfaces. “Thrown” slab Assembling the Body 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 7 7 8 Gently fold over the bottom slab and join it to the body. 10 9 Cut the decorative rim shape using indicator marks above the feet. 11 Cut the decorative rim shape at a bevel to soften the transition. 12 Add a slab to the lid and push out a bump on the underside. Next, cut the bottom slab into a shape that accents the scallop pattern of the feet. Start by making an indicator dot on the slab directly in front of the middle of each foot. This mark will help establish where to cut for the decorative trim on the bottom slab. Trim the slab ¼ inch wider than the body of the form and make a decorative point at each of the four indicator dots in front of the feet (figure 5 ). It is important not to cut the slab to its final size before this step, because it often will stretch and not fit correctly when attached. Then, smooth out the edge of the cut slab with a moist sponge and compress and shape it into a tapered feather edge by applying slight pressure with a moistened thumb and forefinger (figure 6 ). Use your index finger to gently and slowly roll the slab over to join it with the wall of the body. Roll the slab over in stages, being careful not to push it all the way over in one move because it will buckle and ripple (figure 7 ). Finally, move on to shape the top lip of the body into a delicate, scalloped edge. Working right side up on the banding wheel, make new indicator marks on the rim directly above each foot and four additional marks on the rim bisecting the piece along its length and width. Cut out the rim scallops using the indicator marks to define the high and low points of the cut (figure 8). These cuts are shallow—no more than 3/8 inch below the Smooth and round off the rim, then flute the lip using both hands. Attach the handle parts and shape the interior curve. rim—and should be straight with no bevel. Use your fingers and a moist sponge to compress the rim and smooth and round out the lip. Moistening the lip also makes the clay more pliable and less prone to cracking during the final shaping. Finish the rim Joining Slip Recipe 1 cup vinegar Approximately 8 squares of cheap toilet paper 1 heaping cup of dry clay in chocolatechip-sized chunks Blunge the toilet paper in the vinegar with an immersion blender to break down the paper fibers. Add dry clay and stir lightly with a wood tool until everything is moist. Let the mixture rest overnight. Stir vigorously with a wood tool the next day. The mixture will be foamy and the consistency of sour cream to frosting. Joining slip can be stored almost indefinitely in a covered jar. Add more vinegar if the mixture gets too stiff. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 8 Soup Tureen, 14 in. (36 cm), thrown and altered porcelain, using the same technique. by running a moistened index finger along the lip to roll it over while supporting the outside of the walls with your other hand (figure 9 ). Assembling the Lid Start by placing the thrown lid part, wide side down, onto the lid seat of the base. Adjust the shape of the oval if necessary to match the base. Then, repeat the steps above to define the shape of the lid (figure 10 ). Note the upward angle of the knife, and attach the slab on top of the lid. Make indicator marks on the slab, lid, and body to help with proper alignment later. Repeat the slab attaching process (refer to steps in figures 3–7). Cut the lid slab to the appropriate size, including the decorative points, smooth out the cut edges and fold over the slab to join it to the lid (figure 11). Note I finish the lid with a small interior bump made by pressing on the underside of the lid with my finger (figure 11). I do this to add visual volume to the lid and to fill up the negative space under the handle. Attaching the Handle Make the handle for the lidded container from four parts—a large, hourglass-shaped base handle; two accent straps, and a teardrop shaped ball (see handle parts in figure 1). The consistency of the handles pulled earlier should be the same as the body parts—flexible but not so soft as to show fingerprints. Start by attaching the main handle to the lid, and establish the handle’s curve. Then, place the accent strips on top of the main handle to establish their location. Cut off the excess length of the straps so that they are about 3/8 inch longer than the midpoint of the main handle. Smooth and round out the cut ends of the accent straps and roll each end up into a curl. Slip, score, and attach the straps one side at a time to maintain their correct alignment on the main handle. To complete the handle, insert a small teardrop shaped ball between the accent curls (figure 12 ). Dry both parts of the box together until they begin to change color, then separate the parts and dry the lid on its side and the base upside down until both are completely dry. Bisque and glaze fire both parts together. For information on my glazing technique, see the link to my CeramicArtsDaily.org article at: http://ceramicartsdaily.org/tag/martha-grover/. Special thanks to Joshua David for his help with this article and the images. Martha H. Grover received her MFA from the University of Massachusetts—Dartmouth. She is currently a resident artist at the Archie Bray Foundation in Helena, Montana. Her work can be seen online at www.MarthaHGrover.com. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 9 Four Ways to Red by Dave Finkelnburg Chinese ceramic lore includes the tragic tale of a potter who became so frustrated with his many failures to produce a red glazed pot for his emperor that he finally threw himself into his kiln. When the kiln cooled and was opened, so the tale goes, the finest red glazes were found. Modern materials make it considerably easier to produce red glazes, although challenges remain. Knowing the chemistry and firing requirements of the types of red glazes will save you from throwing yourself into your kiln. Defining the Terms Stain—Essentially a frit made of colorant chemicals, compatible fluxes, and possibly glass formers, which has been melted, cooled, and pulverized to a fine powder. Encapsulated Stain (Inclusion Pigments)—A new generation of stable stains made by melting metallic colorants with zirconium silicate, cooling the melt, and grinding the result to a fine powder. Because zirconium silicate is refractory, stains containing it can produce brighter colors up to cone 10 using pigments that would otherwise fade at high temperatures. These colors are safe to use in the studio. Flux (molar) Unity or Seger Formula— The chemical composition, commonly of a fired glaze, expressed as one mole of total flux to the number of moles of all other ingredients in the glaze. The term ‘unity molecular formula’ does not specify whether the flux, alumina, or glass formers are in unity. Each can be at different times for different purposes, but flux unity is used almost universally by ceramic artists. Selenium/Cadmium Red The easiest, most reliable path to red is to use tion atmospheres. These stains are refractory at relatively recently developed cadmium inclu- pottery temperatures and do not melt much, if sion stains. These stains also contain selenium at all. However, the manufacturers recommend combined with sulfur, and they will produce that the stain not be ball milled. the full range of colors in the red spectrum As with lead, cadmium stains can produce foodfrom yellow through orange to brilliant red. safe colors. However as with lead, cadmium They work in both translucent and opaque under certain circumstances can be leached from glazes, in oxidation and reduction firings, and the fired glaze. A sample of any cadmium staintinted glaze used on potential food surfaces at all firing temperatures. Historically, cadmium and selenium have should be tested for leaching by a qualified produced glamorous red glazes but only at laboratory. low temperatures. The colorants burned out Inclusion stains are suitable for use in a wide variety of base glazes. at higher kiln temperaLow-Fire Satin glaze The amount of stain to tures and the resulting Cone 04 use must be determined red glazes were pale. The discovery of the Ferro Frit 3195. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50% by testing, because the base glaze and applicaencapsulation process Dolomite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 tion thickness will influ(the of melting the colo- EPK Kaolin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 100% ence the fired results. rants into a zirconium Reds produced with silicate glass at high Add:Encapsulated Mason Stain #6025 Coral Red. . . . . . . . . . . . 15% these stains, while very temperatures) has now reliable, tend to be flat made the many hues of yellow through red reliable at temperatures and lack the variation produced when using through cone 10 in both oxidation and reduc- oxides and/or atmospheric kilns. Iron Red Iron red glazes often have vibrant names like Tomato Red or Ketchup Red, and they are generally warm reds. The true reds are produced in oxidation around cone 5. By cone 10, they tend to turn toward orange or persimmon. High-iron glazes fired in heavy reduction will turn maroon to black. Iron reds are mainly iron saturated, which means they contain between 5 and 10% iron oxide in the glaze recipe (most recipes use 7% or more). Iron reds with bone ash (calcium phosphate) as a source of phosphorous (phosphorous in general causes opalescence and brighter colors) typically contain on the order of 10%. Even considering the above specifications, there is wide variation in iron red recipes. Traditional persimmon or kaki recipes, for example, are very high in both alumina and silica but contain no phosphorous. The source of iron oxide is important to the color produced and is possibly the most variable colorant used in glazes. The percentage of iron, particle size, and amount of clay, silica or other contaminants may be dramatically different from one source of iron oxide to another. iron red glaze Cone 10 Bone Ash. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.91% Pearl Ash (Potassium Carbonate) . . 10.68 Whiting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25.24 Custer Feldspar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.80 Grolleg Kaolin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35.92 Silica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18.45 100.00% Add:Red Iron Oxide (Spanish) . . . . 9.71% From Pete Scherzer, CM Sept. 2003 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 10 Copper Red Copper reds are achieved between cones 5 and 11 by reducing the bide can be a source of glaze blisters and pinholing, its use presents copper (either copper oxide or copper carbonate) in the glaze. Only its own set of problems in the studio. At cone 10, any combination of glaze a small quantity of copper is necessary for ingredients that contains, in terms of this; 0.25% copper carbonate is sufficient, Copper Red #11 Glaze flux (molar) unity, 0.3 moles of alkalis, though more is often used. The red color is Cone 10 Reduction 0.7 moles of alkaline earths (preferably aided by the presence of a limited amount Colemanite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.80% most or all as CaO), 0.4 moles of alumina, of tin. Iron can also help produce a red color Whiting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.73 3.5 moles of silica, 0.15 moles of B2O3, in copper red glazes, but too much iron will Kona F-4 (sub Minspar 200). . . . . . 15.57 lead to muddy reds. 1% tin, and 0.5% copper carbonate can Nepheline Syenite . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.43 The various hues of copper red are influproduce a fine copper red if properly fired. English China Clay. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.48 enced by the amount of alumina, magneUnderstanding and controlling the reSilica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35.99 sium, and boron present in the glaze. High duction atmosphere in a kiln to achieve 100.00% alumina tends to produce cooler reds, as copper reds is usually by far the most does magnesium, while high boron prodifficult part of working with this family Add: Tin Oxide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.72% duces warmer reds. of glazes. The glaze above is best if the Copper Carbonate. . . . . . . . . 0.42% Copper red glazes tend to be somewhat kiln is placed in moderate reduction at A vibrant red that may turn blue, green, or fluid, so glaze runs should be guarded cone 010 and held there until cone 9 purple where thick; runs when thick. From against in glaze application. Boron pardrops. The kiln can then be soaked in Andy Cantrell, CM May 2000. ticularly enhances the fluidity at cone 10. oxidation until cone 10 is down. A smoky Where copper reds flow off of rims or high fire, as used with carbon trap glazes, is points, they tend to turn white. never necessary to achieve copper reds. Oxidation copper reds in electric kilns are achieved by mixing a reducing In fact, a sooty atmosphere in the kiln is likely to produce gray, dingy agent, silicon carbide, with the copper in the glaze. Because silicon car- copper reds due to carbon trapping. Chrome-Tin Pink Chrome-tin pink glazes are, as their name implies, a combination moles Al2O3, not more than 0.25 moles B2O3, 2.5 to 3 moles SiO2, of chrome and tin that produces somewhat cool reds from a light up to 7.5% tin oxide, and not more than 0.5% of chrome oxide pink to a deep burgundy. The combination works well from low (0.15% is often enough). fire into the cone 6 range, but poorly above cone 9. A thin application of a chrome-tin glaze will tend toward gray According to Cullen Parmelee in his book Ceramic Glazes, the rather than red. Close examination of the glaze with a magnifyglaze chemistry necessary is fairly specific: calcium is the most ing glass will reveal the red is present in small islands within a important flux because it gives the color a greater stability and matrix of clear glass. This explains why a thicker application will produce more vibrant red. Chrome-tin a more fiery red color while sodium pinks can be produced more reliably promotes yellow shades. Boron should from commercial stains than from the be limited because it tends to shift the Raspberry raw materials, but stains are not required color toward purple. Additionally, if your Cone 6 to produce this red. base glaze contains barium, the color Whiting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.0% Chrome-tin pinks present special chaleffects will be stronger in the absence of Nepheline Syenite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18.0 lenges when working at cone 5–6, boron. Zinc should be avoided because Ferro Frit 3134. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14.0 because chrome (either from chrome chrome and zinc can interact to produce OM-4 Ball Clay. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18.0 green glazes or chrome-tin reds) can brown. High alumina works against the Silica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30.0 vaporize at the peak of the firing and red. Because a glaze can dissolve some 100.0% give a pink blush to adjacent ware with of the clay body, changing the alumina Add:Tin Oxide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.5% white glazes containing tin. Since tin is and flux content of the glaze, these Chrome Oxide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.2% occasionally used as an opacifier, this is glazes require careful testing. This glaze often benefits from a controlled not an uncommon occurrence. This can A good starting point for creating a slow cooling. From Mastering Cone 6 be especially problematic if working with chrome-tin glaze at cone 6, in terms of Glazes by John Hesselberth and Ron Roy. commercial glazes where the full list of flux unity, is from 0.7 to 0.9 moles CaO, ingredients is not obvious. from 0.1 to 0.3 moles alkalis, 0.25 to 0.3 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 11 All About Iron by John Britt Iron is everywhere in many different forms, but that doesn’t mean it has to be boring—or even brown. Defining the Terms Iron Glazes Iron—The fourth most common element in the earth’s crust and It would be impossible to show all iron glazes in this article but highlighting a few will give you a glimpse of the wide variety. the most common element (in terms of mass) on the planet, comprising 35% of the earth’s core. Melting Point: 2795°F (1535°C ) Toxicity: Non-toxic Forms of Iron Iron oxide is the most common colorant in ceramics. It is so ubiquitous that it is very difficult to find a material without some iron—it’s found in almost everything from feldspars to kaolin to ball clays, earthenware clays, and many colorants. In fact, many materials require expensive processing to reduce the amount of iron to acceptable levels. Iron is a very active metal that combines easily with oxygen. That means it is very sensitive to oxidation and reduction atmospheres, producing a wide range of glaze colors and effects from off white, light blue, blue, blue-green, green, olive, amber, yellow, brown, russet, tea-dust, black, iron saturate, iron spangles, iron crystalline (goldstone/tiger’s eye), oil spot, hare’s fur, kaki (orange), leopard spotted kaki, tan, black seto, pigskin tenmoku, shino, gray (Hidashi), iridescent, silver, gold, etc. Iron also plays a major role in clay bodies, slips, terra sigillata, and flashing slips. There are three major forms of iron used in ceramics: red iron oxide (Fe203), black iron oxide (FeO or Fe3O4), and yellow iron oxide (FeO (OH)). There are different mesh sizes and grades, and each contains varying degrees of impurities that can make a significant difference in the results you get. The most interesting thing about iron is that it can act both as a refractory and a flux. As red iron oxide, Fe2O3, it is an amphoteric (refractory/stabilizer) similar in structure to alumina (Al2O3). But if it is reduced to black iron oxide (FeO) it acts as a flux similar in structure to calcium oxide (CaO). What this means is that a tenmoku glaze with 10% red iron oxide will be a stiff black glaze if fired in oxidation because the iron oxide acts as a refractory. But, if the same glaze is fired in reduction that 10% Fe2O3 will be reduced to FeO, changing it to a flux, which will make it a glossy brown/ black glaze that may run. Another interesting property of iron oxide is that if it is fired in oxidation it will remain Fe2O3 until it reaches approximately 2250°F (approximately cone 8) where it will then reduce thermally to Fe3O4 on its way to becoming FeO. The complex iron oxide molecule simply cannot maintain its state at those temperatures. This results in the release of an oxygen atom that will bubble to the surface of the hot glaze and pull a bit of iron with it. When it reaches the surface the oxygen releases the iron as it leaves the glaze, creating spots with greater concentrations of iron oxide. This is what creates an oil spot glaze. This reaction can easily be seen through the spy hole of a kiln or with draw tiles. There is an obvious and unmistakable bubbling. If heated further, these spots begin to melt and run down the pot, creating a distinctive “hare’s fur” effect. Ron Roy Black Cone 6 Talc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3% Whiting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Ferro Frit 3134 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 F-4 Feldspar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 EPK Kaolin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Silica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 100% Add: Cobalt Carbonate. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1% Red Iron Oxide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9% Fake Ash Cone 6 reduction Bone Ash. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.0% Dolomite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24.5 Gerstley Borate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.0 Lithium Carbonate. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.0 Strontium Carbonate. . . . . . . . . . . . 9.5 Ball Clay. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21.0 Cedar Heights Red Art. . . . . . . . . . . 28.0 100.0% Chinese Crackle (Kuan) Cone 10 reduction Custer Feldspar. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83% Whiting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Silica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 100% Add: Zircopax (optional) . . . . . . . . . . . . 10% Adding small amounts of red iron oxide to this feldspathic base and firing in reduction will result in the following: Blue Celadon: 0.5%–1.0% Blue–Green: 1–2% Olive to Amber: 3–4% Tenmoku: 5–9% Iron Saturate: 10–20% Ketchup Red (Jayne Shatz) Cone 6 oxidation Gerstly Borate. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31% Talc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Custer Feldspar. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 EPK Kaolin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Silica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 100% Add: Spanish Red Iron Oxide. . . . . . . . 15% Works best on dark colored stoneware. If used on a buff clay body, the red is less intense. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 12 Sources of Iron Form Chemical Name Red Iron Oxide Fe2O3 ferric iron, Hematite Characteristics Most Common Use Most common form of iron and is a finely ground material that disperses well in glaze slurries, contains 69.9% Fe in the chemical formula, sold as: •Natural Red Iron Oxide or Brown 521 (85% purity) •Spanish Red Iron Oxide* (83–88% purity ) •Synthetic Red Iron Oxide* (High Purity Red Iron or Red 4284) (96–99% purity). Very fine 325 mesh. Sometimes sold as the brand name Crocus Martis or Iron Precipitate. Used in glazes, washes, slips, engobes, terra sigillatas, and clay bodies, used to make celadons, tenmoku, kaki, iron saturates, etc. (more listed in the text on page 22) Normally used from 1–30% in glazes. Black Iron Oxide FeO ferrous oxide, wustite Strongest form of iron, containing 72.3% Fe in the chemical FeO, sold as: •Natural Black Iron Oxide (85–95% purity) 100 mesh; is black in color and has a larger particle size. In glazes it’s prone to speckling but is easily eliminated by ball milling. •Synthetic Black Iron Oxide* (99% purity) 325 mesh Used in glazes, washes, slips, engobes, and terra sigillatas; used to make celadons, tenmoku, kaki, iron saturates, etc. Yellow Iron Oxide FeO (OH) ferric oxide hydrate, Geothite Weakest form of iron, containing 62.9% Fe in the chemical formula, has a high LOI of 12%, sold as: •Synthetic Iron Oxide* (96% purity) 325 mesh •Yellow Ochre or Natural Yellow Iron Oxide (35% purity) contains impurities of calcium carbonate, silica, and sometimes manganese dioxide Used in glazes, washes, slips, engobes, terra sigillatas, and clay bodies; used to make celadons, temmoku, kaki, iron saturates, etc.; sometimes yellow ochre is added to porcelain to make “dirty” porcelain (5–9%) Umber, Burnt Umber Calcined Umber which is a high-iron ochre material containing manganese Used in glazes, washes, slips, engobes, terra sigillatas or claybodies to make a range of reddish-brown colors; darker than sienna and ochre (yellow iron) Sienna, Burnt Sienna Calcined Sienna, which is a high-iron ochre material with less manganese than umber Used to make browns in glazes, washes, slips, engobes, terra sigillatas or clay bodies Cr2FeO4 Contains chrome and iron oxide (ferric chromate); toxic— absorption, inhalation, and ingestion Used to make dark colors in glazes, slips, engobes or clay bodies; can give gray, brown, and black; can give pink halos over tin white glazes FeCl3 Water soluble metal salt; toxic—corrosive/caustic, affects liver, inhalation and ingestion Used in low-fire techniques, like pit firing, aluminum foil saggars, horse hair and raku techniques; also used in water coloring on porcelain techniques FeSO4 Water soluble metal salt, soluble form of iron, (aka Crocus Martis) Salt used in water coloring on porcelain, raku, and low-fire soda Iron Chromate Ferric Chloride/ Iron Chloride Iron Sulfate (Copperas) Iron Phosphate FePO4 Rutile (light, dark, TiO2 Most common natural ore of titanium, containing various impurities including iron ( up to 15%) Used in glazes, washes, slips, engobes, and terra sigillatas to give yellows, tans, greens, blues, and milky, streaky, mottled textures; also used to produce crystalline glaze effects FeTiO3 Naturally occurring ore containing iron and titanium, higher in iron than rutile (when 25% or more iron is present) Commonly used to produce speckles in glazes or clay bodies e.g., Redart, Albany slip, Alberta Slip, Barnard Slip (aka Blackbird Slip), Michigan slip, Lizella, laterite, and other assorted earthenware clays Used in glazes, slip glazes, slips, engobes, terra sigillatas, and claybodies to make a range of reddishbrown colors Iron scale or iron spangles—coarse, hard particles that resist melting and chemical breakdown Gives speckles in clay bodies and glazes and granular) Illmenite (powdered and granular) Iron Clays Magnetic Iron Oxide Fe3O4 Magnetite Rarely used but can be used to develop iron red colors; sometimes used instead of bone ash as a source of phosphate without the calcium in synthetic bone ash (TCP or tri-calcium phosphate) *Synthetic and Spanish Varieties Synthetic Red Iron is produced by calcining black iron oxide particles in an oxidation atmosphere. They are then jet milled, which produces “micronized” red iron oxide particles that are approximately 325 mesh. This type of red iron is very heat stable (up to 1832°F (1000°C). This differs from black iron oxide, which changes color at 365°F (180°C) from black to brown to red as it oxidizes. The color of red iron oxide changes from light pinkish to red to dark purplish red as the particle size increases. Spanish red iron oxide is bacterially ingested iron oxide that is micronized. The Tierga mines in Spain found that their iron sulfide was inadequate for steel making (which accounts for 95% of the iron market). After some time a worker noticed that the iron in a pool of rain water turned a brighter shade of red after it was heated. This turned out to be caused by a bacterium that uses iron sulfide as an energy source. The bacterium changes the state of the iron, which is then put into evaporative ponds where it forms green crystals. These are then roasted to produce Spanish red iron oxide. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 13 Thrown Agateware by Michelle Erickson and Robert Hunter Factory of John Dwight, England (Fulham), 1670-1859. Covered Tankard, ca. 1685-1690. Stoneware with salt glaze, 10½ inches (27 cm) in height. Courtesy the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri. Gift of Frank P. Burnap. Photograph by Jamison Miller. Beginning in the late seventeenth century, a prepared mixture of various colored clays that mimics the variegated appearance of agate stone was used to fashion a class of English ceramics recognized as agateware. There are two types of agateware, one is wheel thrown and the other is made using hand-building techniques, and is classified as laid agateware. We’re focusing on thrown agateware today, but for an expanded explanation of laid agateware, see the November/December 2009 issue of PMI, pp. 17-21. Background The earliest English thrown agate is found among the products of John Dwight (even though he himself referred to it as marbled rather than agateware). Considered by many as the father of English pottery, Dwight is well known in the annals of ceramic history for his innovations. He conducted numerous ceramic experiments beginning in the 1670s, delved into the mysteries of porcelain, and recorded his recipe to produce “marbled” stoneware. Dwight’s notes reveal two important material considerations in making an agate body: clay color and clay compatibility. To create the illusion of agate striations, different colored clays must be obtained naturally or by modification, adding pigments or coloring agents. The tone of a natural clay can also be altered by sieving to remove impurities such as iron and sand. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 14 1 2 In preparing the clay for throwing, slabs of varied colored earthenware clays are cut and stacked. 3 The slabs are then stacked in alternating colors. After the initial stacking, the clay is sliced in half and restacked. 5 4 This ball of clay has been cut in half to show an example of the agate pattern prior to throwing. 6 Center the prepared clay ball on the wheel. The agate pattern will not be visible on the surface. Creating a successful variegated appearance also depends on the proportions of clay colors used. Clues for understanding problems related to combining multiple clays are also contained in Dwight’s formula. These include shrinkage rates, firing temperatures, density, plasticity, elasticity, and strength. All of these properties must be considered when mixing dissimilar clay bodies. Today, only a few of Dwight’s “marbled” or agatewares survive. In addition, some agateware fragments have been recovered from archaeological excavations of his pottery site in Fulham, England. These fragments include examples of a tankard, a gorge (or mug), a cappuchine (coffee cup), and a teapot. It is hard to judge whether Dwight’s agateware was The different colored clays are carefully wedged or kneaded together to prepare a ball for throwing. Open the clay ball and pull up quickly into a low cylinder. Try to do this in one pull as to not overwork the clay. received as a novelty or as an important scientific discovery. Commercial production of English agateware began in earnest in the second quarter of the eighteenth century. In 1729, Samuel Bell, at the Lower Street Potworks, Newcastle-underLyme, was granted a patent to produce “red marbled stoneware with mineral earth found within this kingdom which being firmly united by fire will make it capable of receiving a gloss so beautiful as to imitate if not compare with ruby.” Like Dwight’s agate, the Bell products were thrown on the wheel. After being initially formed, the wares were turned on the lathe to thin the body and concurrently create a clean variegated surface. These wares typically had a red and off-white clay body even though a black colored clay was used. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 15 7 8 The cylinder is shaped into the final mug form. Note the muddy surface concealing the agate patterning. 10 9 A cross section of a fully thrown cylinder shows distinct lines and swirls of the colored clays. 12 11 Final finishing of the base and additional design elements, textures or a foot can be done using a rib. Again using a metal rib, scrape the interior of the mug to remove the slip from the surface and reveal the pattern. Archaeological evidence from the excavation of Staffordshire factory sites, including that of John Bell and of John Astbury at Shelton Farm, shows that many potters made this type of thrown agate. Tea wares were the most common forms made, although mugs and bowls were also produced. Thrown agate reached the height of its popularity in the 1750s and continued in production into the early 1770s. A number of nineteenth-century American potteries used agate clays to manufacture doorknobs covered with a Rockingham glaze. In the twentieth century, agateware makes a brief appearance in the arts and crafts movement, most notably in the “Mission Swirl” line of the Niloak Pottery Company in Benton, Arkansas. Another thrown agate of this The slip covering the exterior of the thrown mug is scraped away using a metal rib, revealing the agate pattern. The form can be supported from the inside and turned on a lathe to refine the agate pattern further. general type was produced by North State Pottery of North Carolina in the 1920s and 1930s. Preparing the Clay The key step in creating an agateware body can be summed up in three words: preparation, preparation, preparation! For creating thrown agate, the initial selecting and mixing of clays is critical. For the piece demonstrated here, three colored earthenware clays were selected: a white clay, a red iron clay, and an iron manganese body (figure 1 ). Tip: You could also start experimenting by using only one light colored clay body and adding commercial stains or oxides to create three different colors. This can reduce some 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 16 “The key step in creating an agateware body can be summed up in three words: preparation, preparation, preparation! For creating thrown agate, the initial selecting and mixing of clays is critical.” of the problems that arise when using different clay bodies, including different shrinkage rates, firing temperatures or other compatibility issues, though some stains can be incompatible with one another as well, so testing is necessary. To begin, clay slabs are built up, alternating the colors (figure 2 ). This stack is then wedged or folded to form a ball that can then be thrown on the wheel (figure 3 ). Care has to be taken during wedging to ensure the clays are mixed without overly distorting or blurring the resultant agate pattern. For demonstration purposes, the wedged ball is cut to show the pattern prior to throwing (figure 4 ). The degree of success in an agate pattern comes from the initial wedging process as well as the throwing. Creating Wheel-Thrown Agateware The prepared clay ball is then centered on the wheel (figure 5 ). Once centered, the clay ball is opened and pulled quickly into a cylinder (figures 6 and 7 ). During throwing, the surface of the clay body becomes smeared so that the agate patterning is obscured. Care has to be exercised during throwing so as not to overwork the clay; otherwise, the pattern becomes muddled. This test piece was cut in half to show how the agate patterning shifts as the clay moves in response to the pressures exerted when throwing. The different colors remain distinct (figure 8 ). Since nearly all Staffordshire thrown agate was subsequently trimmed on the lathe, the veining usually appears sharp and crisp. Later smearing and smudging can oc- cur at the attachment points of handles or spouts as evidenced on some antiques. Most potters don’t have a lathe, but the pattern can be revealed by using a metal rib (figure 9 ) to scrape away the slip and outer layer of clay from the surface. Using a shaped rib or the metal rib again defines the foot or base while maintaining a crisp pattern (figure 10 ). Lastly, scraping the interior of the form reveals the agate pattern on the inside (figure 11 ). If you have access to a lathe, the form can be supported from the inside on a chuck and the pattern further refined and revealed (figure 12 ). Michelle Erickson has over 20 years experience in working with 17th- and 18th-century reproduction pottery in addition to her considerable contemporary work. She produces reproductions for organizations such as Colonial Williamsburg, the National Park Service, Parks Canada, the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts, the Philadelphia Museum of Art and Historic Deerfield museum. She is a partner in the business, PERIOD DESIGNS in Yorktown, Virginia, an innovative firm specializing in the reproduction of 17th- and 18th-century decorative art. Robert Hunter is a professional archaeologist and editor of the annual journal, Ceramics in America, published by the Chipstone Foundation of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He is a partner in the business PERIOD DESIGNS. Mr. Hunter lectures widely and has written for a variety of ceramic publications including Ceramic Review, Studio Potter, Ceramics: Art and Perception, Keramik Techni, and ANTIQUES. 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 17 ... see what’s hatching this summer when you bring Georgies ^6 Glazes into your garden !!! Visit our website for technique details. www.georgies.com 800.999.2529 2011 clay workshop handbook | Copyright© 2011, Ceramic Publications Company | www.ceramicartsdaily.org 18