trina's Profile
Reputation: 0
Neutral
- Group:
- Members
- Active Posts:
- 281(0.53 per day)
- Most Active In:
- In the Studio (149 posts)
- Joined:
- 06-December 11
- Profile Views:
- 60,058
- Last Active:
Today, 11:08 AM- Currently:
- Offline
Latest Visitors
-
TJR 
21 May 2013 - 17:38 -
celia12345678910 
21 May 2013 - 15:39 -
GEP 
21 May 2013 - 08:38 -
fuoco di forno 
21 May 2013 - 04:40 -
Benzine 
20 May 2013 - 18:12 -
Berte 
12 May 2013 - 11:21 -
Marian65 
12 May 2013 - 02:15 -
jbpots 
29 Apr 2013 - 17:01 -
Frankiegirl 
17 Apr 2013 - 13:30 -
Guest
07 Apr 2013 - 20:42
Posts I've Made
-
In Topic: Before and After a Glaze fire
Posted 24 May 2013
Thanks for posting that! I too am totally jealous, I would love a kiln that size and the skill to be able to fill it that well! T -
In Topic: What Do You Pug?
Posted 23 May 2013
OffCenter, on 22 May 2013 - 06:29 PM, said:
trina, on 22 May 2013 - 04:58 PM, said:Hi,
As everyone already knows I am very primative and still use a splash pan....WHATEVER! my eyes are too tired....
Anyway back on the topic. Firstly I don't pug my own clay but my neighbour pottery does. I know he pugs from reconstituted clay that has been totally dried out first, pulverized and then water added. We have had conversations about the fact that the water in this area it very very hard. I know he adds a floculant / epsom salt. How much ect not sure but can find out. I will say though I have used his clay and sometimes it is a bit short and sometimes not. I am guessing he isn't that accurate with the amounts.
This might be of some interest to you: http://pubs.usgs.gov...334g/report.pdf
I haven't read it myself as it has some pretty big words but was impressed by the number of pages.
T
Holy Crap, T! I'm not reading that. That looks like something John B would read. But thanks anyway.
Jim
Ya, i get that. Just interested in the relationship between viscosity and plasticity. T -
In Topic: What Do You Pug?
Posted 22 May 2013
Hi,
As everyone already knows I am very primative and still use a splash pan....WHATEVER! my eyes are too tired....
Anyway back on the topic. Firstly I don't pug my own clay but my neighbour pottery does. I know he pugs from reconstituted clay that has been totally dried out first, pulverized and then water added. We have had conversations about the fact that the water in this area it very very hard. I know he adds a floculant / epsom salt. How much ect not sure but can find out. I will say though I have used his clay and sometimes it is a bit short and sometimes not. I am guessing he isn't that accurate with the amounts.
This might be of some interest to you: http://pubs.usgs.gov...334g/report.pdf
I haven't read it myself as it has some pretty big words but was impressed by the number of pages.
T -
In Topic: Increasing strength of small pieces
Posted 22 May 2013
You could try mixing your clay with paper. (If you are actually using a low fire clay, the glazing temps sound too high) There are quite a few recipes on this site. It would make your pendants stronger, easier to sand and lighter. You might have to fire a bit cooler but easy to test. T -
In Topic: perceived value of a piece
Posted 22 May 2013
My Information
- Member Title:
- Advanced Member
- Age:
- Age Unknown
- Birthday:
- Birthday Unknown
- Gender:
-
- Location:
- spain
- Interests:
- life
Contact Information
- E-mail:
- Private

Sign In
Register
Help

Find Topics
Find Posts
Display name history
Comments
trina
08 Apr 2013 - 12:10