Wood fired crystalline reduction firing
The Video should show the firing of the kiln and some examples of the crystalline glazed testers that I fired in it.
Well I've just made another wood fired kiln. It is a small one and took less than two days to build, but the kiln is a very special one, in that I have made it for reduction firing of crystalline glazed pots.
(Reduction firing is one which is somewhat starved of oxygen. The fire is made so hungry for oxygen that it is forced to take it from oxygen atoms that are in the glaze and the clay that pottery is made of. As a result of losing oxygen atoms, the glaze may change colour, sometimes dramatically.)
This kiln is number 8 in a series of wood fired kilns that I have made, and is more sophisticated than it appears from the outside.
I am pleased to say that the firebox is the most pleasant and easy to fire that I have made to date, and one of its little secrets is that all the air for the firebox enters the kiln from under the ashpit. The air passes through a simple grate and is pre heated by the ash before rising to the wood that is on a grate above it. I have complete control of air coming into this kiln, and a simple damper arrangement controls all air that leaves it. Because of the way that the ash is treated in this kiln, there was almost no build up of ash, as it was able to burn away, so I had no need to rake out ash or use a poker whilst firing the kiln.
I test fired the kiln yesterday, with a small load of crystalline glazed testers, and one copper glazed pot. The firing was wonderfully easy to do, and I fired to a top temperature of 845 degrees Centigrade (1553 Fahrenheit), raku temperature really, but enough to do what I set out to do, which was to put previously electrically fired glazed work into a reduction atmosphere, and bring out a new range of colours out of the glazes.
These tests are... just that. Some glazes don't look very nice, and others have technical problems. There is lots more work to be done to get the best out of the glazes and the kiln, but I am really excited by the possibilities of it, and these tests are the first reduction fired crystalline glazed pots that I have had to hold and to look at. I have only seen photographs on the net and in books before now. Next firing will be less oxygen starved, this one was a little too severe!
Anyway, must go to bed. It has been a long day.
Comments
Your cyrstals are just beautiful.
Love Laura's tea cozy hat. What a neat idea.
Happy New Year to all the Gregorys.
Wishing you a happy new year!
Happy New Year!
I'll be interested to see what else I can fire with this kiln. Earthenware should be well within its capabilities currently, I was able to keep to a very steady 200 degrees Centigrade per hour climb with this until I put it into the reduction part of the firing. It will be interesting to fire it right up to find out what its peak temperature will be. It is fun having a small, economical wood kiln that is so easy to fire.
Happy New Year to you too Patti! Tea cozy hats might have to be our Old Post Office uniform this year! I'm amazed at the colour change of the glazes too....
Hi Elen Susan,
Lovely to hear from you, Happy New Year, and welcome to my site! I see that you have just set up your own blog site, and I do wish you well with that.
Well done all the participants!
Happy New Year! Miss Unsworth said that potential is "existing but not developed!"
The great thing about developing this "existing" is that it is fun and smells of wood smoke and hot clay!
Hi Ang,
A Happy New Year to you!
Sadly... no cones were used. My trouble with cones for this firing was that the low temperature ones that I have all have iron oxide in them, which makes them useless for reduction firing as the iron fluxes them. For this extra firing of crystalline glazes, you really don't need a very high temperature. In fact, reduction applied at too greater temperature, above about 900 - 950 C, if my understanding is correct, will cause a dramatic and disastrous boiling and blackening of the glaze. This is due to the high zinc content of crystalline glazes. I have refired a crystalline glazed test in the electric kiln to 1020 degrees centigrade with no loss of the crystals. In fact there was some improvement, as the outline of the crystals became slightly darker.
At some stage in the not too dim and distant future, I will try firing the kiln quite a bit higher with some earthenware pots in, just to see how easy 1100 is to get, and how evenly the kiln fires. I might manage a cone or two for that one, as I can do cone 03 upwards in non iron bearing cones.
Best wishes for 2011 to you and Laura.
I was very impressed with the glazed cups you showed in the last blog Peter you go from strength to strength and now the kiln what are we going to see during 2011?
I have torn myself away from the shed today to update the blog, I'm not sure what this means for the new year probably that I worked too hard for the previous 3 days on the house roof.
Feast or famine.
Happy New Year to you, your menagerie and the pretty lady in the funny hat. (very clever)
Happy New Year to you and yours too! Just hopped over to your blog and see that you've been up on the roof attending to a possible leak..., we need your tender ministrations down here! We have a ridge that needs attention as we found in 24 hours of rain that we had recently! We could claim to have brought the outside inside, or to have improved the outside inside flow in our property!! Very trendy!
Hello Pat,
Happy New Year to you too, and big purrs from our feline friends to yours!
I fail to understand all the technical details myself, which keeps things interesting! (wouldn't it be boring if we "knew all that there is to be knowed"... to misquote from Wind in the Willows) Pottery seems to have endless vast horizons of territory to discover.
I don't mind sharing the recipe, but I am a bit concerned where you say that you are "new to the potters world", as crystalline glazing is technically demanding and you really need your own kiln and lots and lots of testing of things to get such glazes to work. Most of the success of the process depends on the firing rather than on the glaze formulation, so there is a lot to learn if you want to do such things. The glaze that you mention had two firings, one to its full temperature of cone 9 in an electric kiln. The first firing formed the crystals, but gave white crystals on a white background. The second firing was to just over 800 degrees Centigrade in a specially made wood fired kiln that I describe in this post, and it was subjected to a reduction atmosphere. It was the reduction atmosphere that developed the green and purple colours.
The glaze is simple,
51 fritt 4110 (same as 3110)
24 silica
25 zinc oxide (calcined)
+ 6 titanium dioxide
+ 2 bentonite
You will need to fire this to cone 9 quite rapidly. Cool to about 1100 Centigrade, then hold that temperature for a minimum of 4 hours.
You will need either porcelain or a good white stoneware clay. Preferably one that vitrifies around cone 9.
The pot must be fired on a stand with a glaze catching saucer underneath, because there will be a heavy run off of glaze when the pot is firing in the kiln.
The glaze is probably best brushed onto the pot. About 3mm thick for the top third and 2mm thick lower down. You will need to experiment with glaze thickness.
A helpful site that you should visit is http://www.handspiral.com/ForumGate.htm
This is a forum for crystalline glaze potters. There is lots of practical helpful information on it, and I highly recommend having a look. There is some lovely work on there, but also information about the process that will help you get started with crystal glazing if this is what you really want to do.
Good luck with this, and do report back with your progress. I am happy to help where I can, but I do feel that, if you are really a beginning potter, it is probably best to concentrate on more basic things first, because the road to crystalline glaze heaven is paved with many disasters and frustrations! Best Wishes, P