This is the recipe for the MoonCrater White cone 6 oxidation glaze that I use in my electric kiln. It's a fairly standard white satin matte glaze that I ran across in a February 2003 Ceramic Monthly. The only change I've made was switching out Tin Oxide for Zircopax as a opacifier to give me a softer white.
Gerstle Borate 31.6%
Talc 14%
Kona F-4 Feldspar 19.8%
EPK 5%
Silica 29.6%
Add:
Tin Oxide 5%
Bentonite 2%
By nearly all accounts, this is a bland unpredictable glaze that I should have stopped mixing up 2 years ago, but... well, I like it.
It's faults are what makes this glaze so interesting . When it's overfired on a cone 5 clay body, the glaze develops a rich creamy semi-translucent white satin matte that's inclined to develop patches of wonderfully textured orange peel effects that often transition into shallow open soft edged craters. This is a pleasantly usable texture glaze.
It's faults are what makes this glaze so interesting . When it's overfired on a cone 5 clay body, the glaze develops a rich creamy semi-translucent white satin matte that's inclined to develop patches of wonderfully textured orange peel effects that often transition into shallow open soft edged craters. This is a pleasantly usable texture glaze.
The main reason this glaze is still made is that it's mixed proportionally with a Nutmeg glaze to create an all purpose wonderfully warm earthtoned glaze that's a customer favorite. In house, I refer to this mix as a NutWhite glaze.
The personal reason I still mix this glaze up is because I love what happens when I use it over paper stencil cobalt slipped designs on a red stoneware clay body.
While I'm still never really sure how this glaze will come out of kiln, I love and live for the anticipation of creating works for this glaze. It's a glaze that provides me some of the highs and lows that make studio life so rewarding.
5 comments:
I'm certain that my brother could make sense of this for me,as he tried to explain glazes to me not so long ago. Whatever the mix, the result is stunning.
I love your work! thanx for stopping by my blog, happy to hear your daughter likes my doll. Cheers!
Is this a food safe glaze ?
Yep!
But I still keep it strictly on the exterior because of the unpredictable pitting.
A more suitable white liner would be wiser for the interior of anything that comes in contact with food.
I tried your Mooncrater White, and the tests were quite promising. I'm going to try to push it toward a lite gray, but the finish was spot-on. Thanks for publishing it, and for the useful notes about using it!
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