Alisa Liskin Clausen on thu 10 feb 05
I did not see a request for this type of glaze. However now that Bill
mentions it, the Nutmeg is all right for this appearance. I like the glaze
because it has many nuances from cream to brownish red. Nice to work with
as well.
There is another similar glaze I tried that stays more cream with less
brownish reds, maybe closer to a Shino look a like, called Cream Rust, cone
6-8.
I had recently tested it, and I have a photo of it in Albumn 4 at
http://photos.yahoo.com/alisapots
must have the recipe in the archives but I got it from
ClayTimes, July August, 2004.
regards from Alisa in Denmark
Mert & Holly Kilpatrick on fri 11 feb 05
> >Alisa Clausen wrote
>
> There is another similar glaze I tried that stays more cream with less
> brownish reds, maybe closer to a Shino look a like, called Cream Rust,
> cone
> 6-8.
>
> I had recently tested it, and I have a photo of it in Albumn 4 at
> http://photos.yahoo.com/alisapots
>
> must have the recipe in the archives but I got it from
> ClayTimes, July August, 2004.
Another similar one is Cream Breaking Red:
http://www.potters.org/subject00158.htm
Another one I've been fooling around with, haven't found a good use yet, is
Bird Matt:
http://lsv.ceramics.org/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0401D&L=CLAYART&P=R14154
This glaze is low on silica, I am not recommending this as a balanced glaze,
but I think it has great potential for decorative effects.
Holly
East Bangor, PA
baxleypottery@netzero.net on sat 12 feb 05
Holly,
Thanks for the three links! The matt bird sounds like what I am wanting. I want a pumpkin orange semi matte glaze. That sounds hopeful when thin.
Thanks,
MIchael Baxley
Kansas City USA
www.baxleypottery.com
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