This is such a great video and I learnt so much from it. I do it exactly like that but use a syringe to fill the glaze into the cups. I care tare the syringe fill it with 1/10 th of my glaze and squirt it in the cups. Thank you for sharing this!
Very organized, great. I hate sieving twice, what is the name of the hand blender? Are there any colorants that don't mix with handblender? And where can I get a plastic container with a spout for the scale. Thanks John Dorie
That sp. gr. is specific gravity and you can read about stuff like that in the Overview section. I would just google cone 6 recipes: Celadons at Cone 6: A Traditional High Fire Pottery Glaze is Well Within the Reach of Cone 6 Potters
Thanks for sharing such a vast wealth of knowledge with us!!
This is such a great video and I learnt so much from it. I do it exactly like that but use a syringe to fill the glaze into the cups. I care tare the syringe fill it with 1/10 th of my glaze and squirt it in the cups. Thank you for sharing this!
Good idea!
John you rock
Really good process, looks quite foolproof.
I label the tiles so it is easy for me to just grab a dozen and test. The bottom labels is for the class we are doing.
Lol...when I read your reply I got a childhood flashback "But his toys look more fun than mine!" ...I guess the grass seems greener at John's house!
Very organized, great. I hate sieving twice, what is the name of the hand blender? Are there any colorants that don't mix with handblender? And where can I get a plastic container with a spout for the scale. Thanks John
Dorie
I thought of you when I saw all those glaze bottles!
That sp. gr. is specific gravity and you can read about stuff like that in the Overview section. I would just google cone 6 recipes:
Celadons at Cone 6: A Traditional High Fire Pottery Glaze is Well Within the Reach of Cone 6 Potters
Your workshop is a Disneyland of glazing chemicals!!!! :)