Ceramics Vocab
ideal thickness of clay?
1/4 an inch
how long does it take for clay to be ready for firing?
10 days to 2 weeks
water content
20% water; likewise it shrinks 20% during the drying and firing faces
firing
Clay is hardened by heating it to a high temperature of 1700-2100 degrees, fusing the clay particles. Primitive pottery is usually fired on the ground or in pits with whatever flammable material is available. Kilns allow a more efficient use of materials and more control over the atmosphere during a firing. The two basic atmospheres, oxidation and reduction affect the color of the final piece.
porcelain
Made in Korea and China around 960 AD; a combination of kaolin, silica, and feldspar. it can be worked as clay but when fired properly reaches a state similar to glass. this is translucent and white. potters in the 17th century invented bone china to compete with this
Ceramics
Objects made of clay fired sufficiently high in temperature for a chemical change to take place in the clay body, usually over 1550 degrees.
terra cotta
a brownish-orange earthenware clay body commonly used for ceramic sculpture
glaze
a coating of material applied to ceramics before firing that forms a glass like surface. glazes can be colored, opaque, translucent, or matte.
leatherhard
a damp condition of clay when it is too firm to bend yet soft enough to be carved
oxidation
a firing atmosphere with ample oxygen, an electric kiln always gives an oxidizing fire. in a wood or gas firing, the mixture of fuel and air perfectly adjusted to give a clean burn. acoma whiteware is fired in oxidation
reduction
a firing atmosphere with inadequate oxygen and large amounts of carbon. what would have been copper oxide in an oxidation atmosphere will be pure copper in reduction. reduction allowed the chinese to develop the sangue de beouf red glazes and the same piece in oxidation would be terra cotta color
vitrify
a glassy, non-porous state caused by heat or fusion, mature
stoneware
a high fire clay; this is usually waterproof even without glaze; buff (beige in color)
earthenware
a low-fire clay, porous and not waterproof. To be functional it must be glazed
kiln wash
a mixture of china clay and flint in water solution used to coat kiln shelves to protect them from dripping glaze
stilt
a triangular support for clay pieces that helps prevent glaze from melting on the shelves during a firing
engobe
a white of colored thin layer of clay used to decorate a bisque pot. it may or may not be glazed over
plastic stage
clay is easily manipulated and bent
slab built
clay slabs are cut to shape and joined together using scoring and wet clay called slip. slabs can be draped over or into forms, rolled around cylinders or built up into geometric forms. large forms are difficult because of stresses on the seams because the slab around this by working fibers into the clay body. the fibers burn out during firing, leaving a network on tiny holes. MUST BE LEATHER HARD TO JOIN
bisque
clay that has been fired once, usually at a low temperature, the first firing
elements
coils of high temperature resistance wire that convert electricity to heat
sgraffito
comes from the italian word meaning "scratched through" and is done by incising or cutting a design through a colored slip coating to reveal the clay body
support systems
due to the high content of water, clay must be supported by these with lightly crumpled newspaper; small boxes, or the like for it retain its form
matte glaze
dull surfaced glazes, lusterless and non shiny
describe the molecules of clay
flat
malleable
foldable
dry footing
glaze is removed from the bottom of a piece before firing, making stilting unnecessary
pyrometer
instrument used to record the exact temperature of the kiln
underglazes
liquid clay slip that contains coloring oxides and chemicals used to apply designs to a ceramic piece, no glossy, most of a stain
crackle glaze
minute decorative cracks in the glaze that are often accentuated by rubbed in coloring
bone dry stage
no visible moisture, no dampness to touch, clay is ready to be fired
Coiled Pottery
one of the oldest ways of forming pottery; long strands of clay which are laid on top of each other and joined through blending coil to coil. Coil pieces can be almost any shape or size.
raku
pottery is fired normally but removed when it is red hot and the glaze is molten. it is then usually placed in a bed of combustible materials and covered, creating intense reduction resulting in irregular surfaces and colors.
pinch pots
starting with a ball of clay, the potter opens a hole into the ball and forms a bowl shape through a combination of stroking and pinching the clay.
wheel thrown
term throw comes from the Old English word meaning spin. A piece of clay is placed on a potter's wheel head which spins. the clay is shaped by compression while it is in motion. often the potter will use several thrown shapes together to form one piece.
crazing
the fine network of small cracks that occurs on glazes. the japanese encourage crazing and will stain cracks with concentrated tea
kiln
the furnace in which ceramics are fired. they can be electric, natural gas, wood, coal, fuel oil, or propane. materials used to heat the kiln can affect the word. s
silica
the main chemical compound in sand; also a important element in glass, glaze, and ceramic bodies
wedging
the process of freeing the clay of air and working it to uniform consistency; the method of pushing, lifting, turning 1/4 of a turn is repeated till clay shows no air bubbles. dry clay can be added now if the clay is too wet.
kiln shelves
the shelves inside a kiln that ceramic greenware is stacked on in the kiln. the shelves must be coated with kiln wash to prevent glazed pottery from sticking to the shelf.
incised
these are decorations that are surface designs cut into clay
pyrometric cones
these are slender pyramids of ceramic material made in a graded series to melt and indicate when a firing is nearly completed. In an automatic cutoff kiln, they trip a switch when they melt to cute the kiln off.
oxides
these can be mixed with water and applied to the surface of clay. by varying the amount of material applied and rubbed off, the potter can achieve effects similar to stained wood. the most common stain is iron oxide.
shelf supports
thick posts used to hold shelves in a kiln
slip
this fills in pores and gives a uniform color; also attaches leather hard pieces of clay together after being scored
maturing point
time and temperature needed to completely fire a glaze or clay object to the "vitrified" state
greenware
unfired clay ready or nearly ready for firing
scoring
use to join clay pieces. a process of scratching the surfaces of wet clay with needle tool
riverbeds
where clay is found in it's natural state, formed through erosive effect of water on rock