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A
Discussion of Glazes
By
Dewayne Imsand
|
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DMaking a piece of colored pottery is a very complex
task. There is much work performed in every step necessary
to have a successful outcome. During the early days though,
when many farmers had their small “Blue Bird” potteries,
the principal glaze was made from salt. At the proper
temperature, a small quantity of salt was simply thrown
into the kiln. The salt would vaporize and cover all
the pieces in the kiln with a shinny clear coating. Toward
the end of the 1800’s, colorful glazes were created
to enhance the more decorative designs. This is a much
more difficult task than it may appear.
A
glaze, which is simply a thin coating of glass, begins
as a suspension of ground silica, and clays, in water.
The silica and the clays join and perform three functions.
The first ingredient, silica, is the major ingredient,
and it is the glass former. That is the first function,
however silica cannot be used alone to make glazes
because its melting point is much too high. The clay
bisque (a piece of pottery fired without glaze) would
melt in the kiln long before the silica would.
What
enables the use of silica is the addition of a flux.
The flux performs the second function, which is to
lower the melting point of the silica. For glazes
that are fired at a lower temperature, sodium may
be used as a flux, and for higher fired glazes, Calcium
carbonate is often used.
Another
ingredient that must be added to make an acceptable
glaze is alumina (aluminum oxide clay). It performs
the third function, which is to control the shrinkage
of the glaze. Because the glaze is applied to bisque
pieces that will shrink during the glaze firing,
the glaze itself must also shrink and match the amount
of bisque shrinkage. (Crazing is the result of mismatched
shrinkage rates.) The appropriate amount of shrinkage is achieved by the
addition of a precise amount of alumina.
There
are many substitute sources for each of the glaze
ingredients. Also, many substances perform, to varying
degrees, the function of more than one component.
For example, feldspar provides differing amounts
of all three ingredients, silica, flux, and alumina.
In
addition to the selection of, and proper proportion
of, each ingredient, there is one basic requirement
that all glaze ingredients must have, and that is
they must be insoluble in water. The reason is that
glazes are water suspensions. The only part that
the water plays is to transport the glaze ingredients
onto the surface of the bisque pieces. If one of
the glaze ingredients were soluble, the bisque would
adsorb it along with the water, and the ingredient
would not properly interact with the other ingredients
when it is fired, and it would not properly coat
the bisque.
Incidentally,
there are many methods used to apply glaze onto the
surface of the bisque. A glaze may be applied by
dipping, pouring, spraying, brushing, sponging, squeeze
bag, or some combination of these techniques. Each
technique produces its own special effect.
The
glaze ingredients described above result in a base
glaze. However, a base glaze may have a finish that
is glossy, semi-gloss, or matte, depending on the
firing temperature. Firing at a higher temperatures
yields a glaze with a glossy finish, and firing at a lower temperature
yields a matte finished glaze.
To
make a colored glaze, various metal oxides, (or carbonates)
are added to the base glaze mixture. Additionally, another ingredient,
bentonite (a clay), is typically added. Bentonite promotes a
uniform glaze mixture, or slurry, by reducing the
settling of the oxides or carbonates in the water.
In addition, there is a routine stirring of the slurry
to keep the solid particles uniformly suspended in
the water.
The
various oxides or carbonates that can be added result
in many different colors. The resulting colors depend
greatly on the percentage of the material used, the
kiln temperature, and the type of firing conditions
in the kiln. There are two types of firings that
potters may use in order to create various colors.
They are oxidation firing, and reduction firing. Oxidation
firing describes a condition in the kiln where there
is ample air (oxygen) flow. Reduction firing is a
condition in the kiln in which the flow of air is
deficient. Because the airflow in reduction firing
is reduced, it results in incomplete burning of the fuel, say
natural gas, that is used to heat the kiln. The incomplete
burning causes an increase level of specific gases
in the kiln, such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide,
and hydrogen. These gases are very aggressive in
wanting to combine with oxygen, and since there is
not enough air inside the kiln, they steal it from
the glazes. When metallic oxides, for example, give
up oxygen they convert to their reduced, or more
metallic form. This change is the reason reduction
firing produces different colors and visual effects
than would be produced when metal oxides are fired
with an ample airflow.
The
following are examples of a few metallic oxides and
the colors that they produce using different percentages
of the oxides, and firing types. The variation in
the colors that the oxides produce is governed by
the kiln temperature that is used. There are many
types of metallic oxides that could be used, and
considering the differing percentages of them, the
two firing types, and the various kiln temperatures,
there are very many different possible combinations.
|
METAL OXIDE
|
AMOUNT (percent)
|
OXIDATION
FIRING
|
REDUCTION
FIRING
|
| Cobalt oxide |
1/2-3%
|
blue, blue-violet
|
-
|
| Iron oxide |
1/2-2%
|
-
|
jade green
celadon
|
| Iron oxide |
2-3%
|
-
|
iron yellows
|
| Iron oxide |
3-4%
|
-
|
golden-orange
|
| Iron oxide |
4-5%
|
-
|
brick red
(khaki)
|
| Iron oxide |
5-6%
|
-
|
brown-black
|
| Iron oxide |
1/2-6%
|
amber-greenish
browns
|
-
|
| Manganese
dioxide |
5-10%
|
purple
|
honey browns
|
| Chrome oxide |
2-3%
|
browns, pinks,
and reds
|
greens
|
| Copper oxide |
2-3%
|
turquoise
blues, greens
|
reds, purples
|
| Vanadium
pent oxide |
5-10%
|
yellows
|
grays
|
In addition to
the glaze color, potters may also apply a luster,
a china paint (gold is an example), or a decal, and
then do another firing to achieve a color, or surface
effect that is not possible in glaze firing alone. Lusters
are very thin coatings of metallic substances that produce
iridescent effects. These lusters, and all over-glaze
techniques, are fired at a relative, extremely low temperature,
and because of that, they produce brighter colors than
can be achieved through a routine glaze firings. However,
the low temperature that is used is sufficient to melt
the over-glaze, but not the original underlying glaze.
The over-glaze, or decal, melts onto the original glaze
and fuses.
Some may have
thought that it was the designer had the most difficult
job, but it is also a “tough” job
to develop a particular colored glaze, or to operate
the kiln correctly. Also, these jobs are critical ones
too. With all of the exacting work involved in making
a colorful piece of pottery, it is no wonder that some
techniques that potters use are closely guarded. This
is especially true with glaze formulas.
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