Ceramics
bat
a base for throwing, hand-building, or drying; usually made of plastic, pressed board, plywood or plaster
celadon
a category of green, gray, or blue-gray glazes for stone ware and porcelain; developed in China and Korea
glaze
a coating of glass that is fused to the surface of a ceramic piece
carbonates
a compound containing carbon and other elements, used in making and coloring glazes or clay bodies
oxide
a compound containing oxygen and other elements, used in making and coloring glazes or clay bodies
sgraffito
a decorating in technique where a layer of slip applied to a clay body is scratched through to reveal the clay color
sprig
a decoration in relief, attached to greenware with slip
rib
a flat curved tool made of wood, metal, or plastic used to refine shapes
slip
a fluid suspension of clay in water used in joining clay pieces and for surface decoration
overglaze
a glaze designed to be applied and fired at a lower temperature after the first glaze firing
pinching
a hand-building technique that involves squeezing the clay, usually between fingers and thumb
peephole
a hole in the door of the kiln through which the potter can view the progress of the firing
downdraft kiln
a kiln where the heat and flames are drawn downward and out through openings at the base of the kiln
fettling knife
a long, tapered knife used for cutting and trimming clay
flux
a material that promotes melting or increasing the glass-making qualities of a glaze
clay body
a mixture of clay, minerals, and other ingredients compositon
pigment
a mixture of minerals painted on clay ware before or after firing to produce color
alumina
a primary ingredient in clay and glazes
kiln
a structure built to fire clay at high temperatures
ware
a term for any ceramic
luster
a type of decoration made when metallic salts fired at low temperatures given a metallic sheen to a body or glaze surface
updraft kiln
a type of kiln where the heat is drawn through the kiln and exits through the top
colbalt oxide
a very strong oxide used to produce blue in slips and glazes
kneading
a way of mixing larger pieces of clay to distribute minerals, organic materials, and water evenly and to eliminate air bubbles
wedging
a way of preparing small or medium-sized pieces of clay to improve work-ability and eliminate air bubbles
silica
a white or colorless crystalline compound occurring abundantly as quartz, sand, flint, agate, and many other minerals. It is a sparkly material in sand
colorant
an element or compound that contributes color to a slip, glaze, or ceramic surface
firing cone
an object made of ceramic materials with a specific melting point, used to show the temperature in a kiln during the firing; will bend at the desired firing temperature
flue
an opening within a kiln through which hot gases pass from the chamber to the chimney
underglaze
any coloring element, such as oxides or commercial colorants, applied prior to glaze application
mold
any form used to shape clay
inclusion
any part of a fired clay piece, such as plant remains, rock fragments, and temper, that was not originally a clay mineral
setting
arranging ware in a kiln for firing
coiling
attaching rolls of clay together to form pottery
bisque
ceramic ware that has gone through the first firing at a relatively low temperature (generally cone 010 to 05) and still maintains its porous state
grog
crushed, fired clay used as an additive to reduce clay shrinkage
stoneware
dense, nonporous, hard pottery that matures from cone 5-11 (2200-2400 degrees Farienheight
majolica
earthenware covered with a tin glaze and painted with oxides
oxidation
firing when the amount of oxygen present is more than is necessary to combust the fuel
earthenware
glazed pottery that remains porous when fired at low temperature (below cone 2)
slab building
hand-building technique that involves shaping clay into a broad, flat, thick piece
traditional pottery
hand-built ceramics decorated with natural pigments and fired with organic fuel
kiln furniture
heat-resistant shelves and post used to hold ware during firing
firing
heating pottery or clay sculpture to a temperature high enough to render it hard and durable
atmosphere
mixture of gases in a kiln environment
ceramics
objects made from clay that permanently retain their shape after they have been heated to specific temperatures
burnishing
polishing the surface of a leather-hard pot to compact it and produce and maintain a sheen at low firing temperatures
scoring
scratching the edges of clay before joining them together
relief
sculptural or decorative forms that project from a flat background
bone dry
stage of drying when moisture in the clay body has evaporated so the clay surface no longer feels cold
porosity
the amount of empty space in the structure of the fired clay that makes it capable of absorbing liquids
foot
the base of a pot upon which it can stand
aesthetics
the branch of philosophy that deals with issues of what is considered to be beautiful and what is considered to be art
drying
the elimination of water from clay pieces before firing
chamber
the enclosed portion of a kiln where pottery pieces are placed for firing
neck
the part of a vessel between lip and shoulder
plasticity
the property of clay that allows it to change shape without tearing or breaking
shrinkage
the reduction in size of the clay mass, occurs when water in the clay evaporates during drying and firing
lip
the rim opening of a pot
leather hard
the stage between plastic and bone dry when clay has dried, but may still be carved or joined to other pieces
vitrification
the stage during firing when a clay or glaze loses its porosity and transforms into a hard, nonabsorbent, glass-like state
inlay
to fill an incised or impressed area with contrasting colored clay
incise
to remove clay by carving
raw clay
unfired clay
greenware
unfired pottery or sculpture
melting point
when a clay fuses and turns to a fluid glass-like substance during the firing