My thought was, as I watched you applying the detritus, that perhaps you need some areas of plain slip to suggest mountain ranges and plains, also various diameter bottle and jar mouths to impress simulated asteroid strikes. I still have your chesapectens to mail!!
I really dig his work. But when he first flipped the pot over and the detritus was only on the lower third, I thought huh! I never would have thought of doing it like that. Pretty neat! But then he covered the whole thing. :-) regardless, I'm really looking forward to seeing the finished piece.
My thought was, as I watched you applying the detritus, that perhaps you need some areas of plain slip to suggest mountain ranges and plains, also various diameter bottle and jar mouths to impress simulated asteroid strikes. I still have your chesapectens to mail!!
I really dig his work. But when he first flipped the pot over and the detritus was only on the lower third, I thought huh! I never would have thought of doing it like that. Pretty neat! But then he covered the whole thing. :-) regardless, I'm really looking forward to seeing the finished piece.
get on be lovely when fired eh ..fingers crossed for you ..
That's what you call a Chuck!! Nicely done. What about mixing the sweepings up with the slip and adding as one? Looking forward to seeing this fired.
Daft question Steve, but what is bulk of the detritus made of - apart from rust and kiln shelf?
its refractory material of the floor of the glaze shed and studio
Wil you fire that in gas or electric kiln?
this will be electric fired . As I am going for predominantly white surface
@@stevebootonceramic and what kind of glaze do you apply?