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Jack DeNina
Приєднався 21 бер 2010
Tempered Glass Colored With Alcohol Inks....
Tempered glass colored with alcohol inks
Переглядів: 4 257
Відео
Spraying kiln wash with Preval aerosol sprayer....
Переглядів 2,1 тис.8 років тому
Spraying kiln wash with Preval aerosol sprayer....
Thank you for this
Thankyou Jack!
Very Nice!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Wonderful flowers! Do you use 96 COE glass? Thank you for sharing!
Could you please send me the the Drape schedule used for the Lily thank you
Please leave off music for instructional videos. Music on every TV show is bad enough but I really love your videos and want to hear all you have to say
Great flowers. What size is copper rubbing and washers and screw incerts
I can't read the drape fire cycle,can you help me
Why do you set it on fire
thank you so much
Lost volume on the steman. Are they attached to a washer?
Your video is awesome. The instructions and firing schedule worked perfectly for me Thank you so much for sharing this.
Vickie, I'm glad that your project worked so well for you. I am giving this a second try and this time I'm using the correct fiberboard. However, I'm wondering what you used to drill the holes in the fiberboard. Also, this material seems to have a lot of loose fibers that I'm concerned will end up in the finished glass. Did you have any of these issues and if so, how did you handle them?
3/2018 I was so excited to see a tutorial and firing schedule for this sculpture. I followed the directions using fiberboard as the material for the glass to melt through. After about one hour there was a tremendous amount of smoke coming from the kiln. After unplugging the kiln and opening the lid just a little bit at a time, I was finally able to open the kiln lid all the way. What a disappointment!! The fiberboard was sitting on the bottom of the kiln and was in several pieces and had red glowing embers. The glass was still intact for a short time but of course it shattered as soon as the cooler air got into the kiln. I believe the temperature on the kiln was somewhere around 300 degrees F when it started smoking. I'm assuming it was the fiberboard that was the culprit. I bought the fiberboard from Home Depot. Is there another type of fiberboard, that I'm not aware of, that can withstand the heat needed for this sculpture. I would like to try this again but not until I get some info on the type of board needed to create the holes for the sculpture that won't catch fire. Now I have the unpleasant task of cleaning up the blackened fire brick, the mold, the kiln shelf and the kiln posts. If anyone can tell me how to clean the kiln the furniture, I would certainly be very appreciative.
The board you need is a high-temperature insulation type material. Duraboard is the brand name for one version. Kaiserboard is another, although I think availability and name varies depending on which country you're in. They withstand heat up to way over what we fire at. The fibreboard you probably got sounds like a wood-based board - chipboard in the UK. Definitely not suitable, as you sadly discovered. You should be able to scrub the soot off your kiln furniture with water and a stiff brush, although any burn marks are likely to be permanent. Make sure they are totally dry before reuse. One easy way is to weigh them before you wet them and then put them somewhere warm and check their weight over the next few days. When you get back to the original weight, you'll know they're dry all through.
empty kiln with the kiln posts in and then fire to about 1500 deg.F. This should clean the kiln. The other Jim
go to a glass supply store(Bullseye) is a good source. Whatever gave you the idea that a fiberboard from HD would work? The fiberboard that is used in the kiln is a ceramic based product, while the stuff fromHD is meant for insulation in a building. The other Jim
what a pity.i didnt understand about the temperatures and holds.
Beautiful
Hi Jack, how does crashed glass pieces stick to each other? Did you fire them? If yes, at which degree? Thanks.
I noticed you have hole in the bottom of the flowers. did you leave this spacing when placing the glass, or how did you drill through? that part was skipped in your video.
Amazing uncle Jack! Misty
Thanks Jack, what kiln wash brand do you prefer? How often do you shake while not spraying?
hey
How do you get the holes in the flowers so you can attach to the stem?
you can use a Dremel with a diamond hole bit, you have to drill the glass under water. Put a sponge in a bowl, cover the flower with water and drill your hole slowly until you hit the sponge.
Please, please don't use background music!
Beautiful flowers!
Looks great Jack!