March 18, 2009
Patience, Patience: Using Slips and Stains to Add Detailed Decoration to Bone Dry Ceramic Sculpture
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Slips, Stains and Patience
But in his quest for control over his art, he eventually revisited his glazes. While pleased with the colors, stability and level of detail he was able to achieve, the porous low-fire materials he had been using were attracting fingerprints, smudges and dirt - highly undesirable effects when work is designed to engage the viewer, draw them in and encourage them to interact with it. Ziegler began looking for commercially available, alternative glazes and tested numerous options, but none met his needs. Frustrated with the lack of options, he investigated making his own cone 6 underglazes and glazes. After months of testing, he started using commercial stains mixed with slip. He applied it to his pieces in the same way he had been using the low-fire underglazes and lusters, and was able to achieve the same results with none of the limitations. He was also able to produce a wider range of colors than ever before. |
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Scott Ziegler was a Ceramics Monthly Emerging Artist in 2006. Don’t miss this year’s picks for Emerging Artist in the May issue of Ceramics Monthly! |
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“When my work is bone dry,” he explains, “I use a variety of grades of sandpaper to smooth out imperfections. After it is completely smooth, I begin to lay in my color. I create my own colored slips by adding different percentages of commercial stains to the same porcelain clay body used for my pieces, adding water until they become quite fluid. If I am trying to achieve a translucent effect, these thin layers are mostly water with just a small percentage of colored slip. However, if I am trying for a more opaque surface, I add enough water to the colored slip so I have a fluid brush coat. It’s generally not wise to add wet clay to bone-dry clay, because it will crack off, but since the clay in the slip is really just an agent for binding color onto the surface, I can get away with applying many thin layers.That is the trick, but the process is very time consuming. Each area requires three to four brush coats per color. When all the color has been applied, I’m finally able to bisque fire the piece. For the glaze firing, I add glossy and matt glaze and fire to cone 6.” |
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Tags: ceramic colorants, Ceramic Decorating Techniques, underglaze










