Midnight Black II from Seattle Pottery Supply— firing
#1
Posted 04 February 2013 - 03:46 PM
Will it totally completely melt or just slouch a little or what? I only bought 25lbs and I have a 10cu/ft kiln that I won't fill up with just this.
I would just be making mugs and teacups, pretty structurally sound cylinders without any big peripheral things that can't suppor tthemselves.
THanks guys
Eric
PS I'm really new to this stuff. : D
#2
Posted 04 February 2013 - 04:24 PM
Most often the biggest problem in over firing clays containing manganese is bloating, so you may find ^5 is as far as you can take it, especially if your kiln is not perfectly calibrated. If you want to try pushing it to ^6, put a plate under it, something made out of a safe-to-^6 clay.
Dry Ridge Pottery
#3
Posted 04 February 2013 - 05:14 PM
blacknapkins, on 04 February 2013 - 03:46 PM, said:
Will it totally completely melt or just slouch a little or what? I only bought 25lbs and I have a 10cu/ft kiln that I won't fill up with just this.
I would just be making mugs and teacups, pretty structurally sound cylinders without any big peripheral things that can't suppor tthemselves.
THanks guys
Eric
PS I'm really new to this stuff. : D
The cone range is way too broad. The cone a clay should be fired to for maturity should be be one cone or at most 2 cones. Had it been rated cone 4-5 that would be fine but 04-5 can't be a maturity range. That doesn't mean that you can't fire it to 04 and be happy with the piece (as long as it isn't supposed to hold a liquid and you know it is under fired) but it isn't mature at that cone. (Or, if it is then it is it should be a puddle at cone 5.) Usually, a cone 5 clay fires to cone 6 with no problem but what Diane says above is important when using a black clay. Just test it first. Put an unglazed cylinder of it in a cone 6 firing. It's not going to melt. If it doesn't bloat then you know it is probably a cone 5-6 clay and you should test for leakage by filling it with water and leaving it overnight on a piece of paper.
Jim
"But it does move," said Galileo under his breath.
#5
Posted 04 February 2013 - 10:35 PM
OffCenter, on 04 February 2013 - 05:17 PM, said:
Jim
Years ago they told me that "04-6" etc indicates first the ideal bisque temperature and second the maturation temp. I always just thought this was a standard way to label a clay body but people on here have been confused by it so it must be a Seattle Pottery thing.
Thanks everyone else for the information. It gives me a ballpark of expectation without having to worry with meltdown!! : )
I will post results in case anyone is interested : )
#6
Posted 04 February 2013 - 11:09 PM
blacknapkins, on 04 February 2013 - 10:35 PM, said:
OffCenter, on 04 February 2013 - 05:17 PM, said:
Jim
Years ago they told me that "04-6" etc indicates first the ideal bisque temperature and second the maturation temp. I always just thought this was a standard way to label a clay body but people on here have been confused by it so it must be a Seattle Pottery thing.
Thanks everyone else for the information. It gives me a ballpark of expectation without having to worry with meltdown!! : )
I will post results in case anyone is interested : )
Actually, that would be a good way to label clay as long as it is made obvious that the 1st number is bisque and the 2nd is maturity. So, no, firing it to 6 will not melt it but just test it because, since it is a black clay, it may bloat at 6.
Jim
"But it does move," said Galileo under his breath.
#7
Posted 04 February 2013 - 11:29 PM
OffCenter, on 04 February 2013 - 11:09 PM, said:
blacknapkins, on 04 February 2013 - 10:35 PM, said:
OffCenter, on 04 February 2013 - 05:17 PM, said:
Jim
Years ago they told me that "04-6" etc indicates first the ideal bisque temperature and second the maturation temp. I always just thought this was a standard way to label a clay body but people on here have been confused by it so it must be a Seattle Pottery thing.
Thanks everyone else for the information. It gives me a ballpark of expectation without having to worry with meltdown!! : )
I will post results in case anyone is interested : )
Actually, that would be a good way to label clay as long as it is made obvious that the 1st number is bisque and the 2nd is maturity. So, no, firing it to 6 will not melt it but just test it because, since it is a black clay, it may bloat at 6.
Jim
So, bloating sounds pretty obvious but I've never even heard of this before. I'm going to give them a ring tomorrow and find out if there's manganese in this and I will report back.
Thanks guys.
It feels great to be new to pottery. : )
#8
Posted 05 February 2013 - 03:14 PM
Kiln Repair Tech
L&L Distributor
Owner, Neil Estrick Gallery, LLC
www.neilestrickgallery.com
neil@neilestrickgallery.com
#9
Posted 05 February 2013 - 09:14 PM
neilestrick, on 05 February 2013 - 03:14 PM, said:
Yes, it does have manganese in it and I also found some ancient (1994) pdf that said it was non-toxic on google. Sounds a little contradictory. I actually realized today (oops) that the label on the clas states clearly that it contains manganese and suggest wearing a respirator and gloves to minimize exposure.
What safety precautions do you recommend?
I think working on the wheel with a respirator and gloves would be absolutely horrible. In fact that's half the reason why I quit my job as a silversmith/goldsmith/casting shop.
#10
Posted 05 February 2013 - 10:32 PM

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