James

Thanks very much for the info, Penny,cheersmudlarkpottery wrote:Sorry James, I fire to cone 9 and so does Pat. Both of Janet DeBoos' books will give you recipes for your firing temp. You can start with them and experiment. Greg Daly's book is also an excellent source of recipes. For the ceramics websites, you'll just have to log on and check them out individually.
Penny.
Hi Jan, thanks very much for the info, don't suppose you can post a photo of one of those kitchen items of that colour could you ?Jan wrote:I'm no potter, James, but might have a bit of useful info.
Quite some time ago we had some potters living in the area (renting on a farm and since moved on) who used Yellow Box (used in this area for stoves/heating) wood ash in their glaze (I'm curious, so I asked) to give a very appealing olive/euc green and it had a touch of black/brown speckling in it. I still have a couple of kitchen items they made in that colour.
I have no idea about the rest of the recipe but hope the "Yellow Box wood ash" might help in the glaze search,
Jan
Hi Ruth, thanks for the reply, its not cone 6, actually it's cone 06, actually it would be good " perfect " if it was a cone 03 glaze, electric kiln ( oxidization ), do you do pottery or ceramics ??Ruth wrote:I've got no experience with firing to cone 6 either. Although ceramics arts daily do have an article on converting cone 10 glaze recipes to cone 6.![]()
Otherwise this site has quite a few links that might help.
http://www.stonecropstudio.com/potters.shtml
Ruth
Sorry James, I read mid fire and automatically thought cone 6. I should read things more clearly. I would have thought 03-06 is low fire, but then I’ve never fired that low before apart from mucking around with some raku.senseijames wrote: do you do pottery or ceramics ??
Regards
James
I've taken images of this jug in various lights trying to get the color close to "true" (it's evening so only artificial light available). I'll try one tomorrow for you in sunlight (presuming we get some), but this is close to the mark. Not a lot of glaze to choose from on the outside of this one, unfortunately 15 -20 years, and visitors washing up, have taken their toll on the other pieces.senseijames wrote:Hi Jan, thanks very much for the info, don't suppose you can post a photo of one of those kitchen items of that colour could you ? please please please
Regards
James
Thanks Jan for going to the trouble of posting a photo, the color looks promising, I will be making mine a satin matt finish, My opinion is Satin matt or matt, suit bonsai pots more than bright glossy finishes, thanks again for the info also. cheers.Jan wrote:I've taken images of this jug in various lights trying to get the color close to "true" (it's evening so only artificial light available). I'll try one tomorrow for you in sunlight (presuming we get some), but this is close to the mark. Not a lot of glaze to choose from on the outside of this one, unfortunately 15 -20 years, and visitors washing up, have taken their toll on the other pieces.senseijames wrote:Hi Jan, thanks very much for the info, don't suppose you can post a photo of one of those kitchen items of that colour could you ? please please please
Regards
James
The potters mark is three dots, two above and one below, a bit like a smiley face, set in a square. I think they moved to the Picton area - you might be able to trace them through pottery circles in Sydney. Sorry, we've been delving into the archives but can't come up with a name.
Jan.
Hi James,senseijames wrote:Hi Ruth, yes, when i did my own thing back in the 90's I would fire around cone 4 and 5, to get the strength in my pots, but at the pottery club i am with now they only fire to 1100 so it limits me to the types of glazes i can use, i did slip casting mainly only bonsai pots, so are you a potter or a ceramist ? do you make your own bonsai pots ?
James
G'day kvan64, i shall send you a PM regarding your question in the next couple of days, I have just spent 30 minutes typing you a PM with all the info and necessary web sites to obtain the materials etc and lost the blood! lot, the site logged me out, so i am not doing it on here I will put it in a word doc and cut and paste it into a PM for you monday or tuesday . cheerskvan64 wrote:Anyone here know what to use and where to buy materials to make bonsai moulds?