Showing posts with label arabesque. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arabesque. Show all posts

Sunday, April 24, 2011

The testing continues....

So back to my testing adventures...

After all the tests that came out of the last kiln, I decided to try some simple stripes on some small bowls I had sitting around. I thought this would give me a better idea of how the colors work together. 

Here's those pieces: 


There's actually quite a lot happening here. The black around the rim is a trailed line of licorice - from Mastering Cone 6 glazes. I like where it tumbled down the outside of the bowls and mixed with the stripes, but where it blends on the inside of the bowls, I find the streaks too dark. This is easy enough to remedy. My slate does a similar thing and isn't as dark. 

As for the narrow, dark stripes - a dry, moss glaze I had kickin' around that is 5% blackberry wine - while the colors work, I'm not too keen on how dark the stripes are. If you'll notice, I accidentally forgot to fill in those narrow stripes on one bowl and I think it works better than the darker stripes. The black pinstripes here are a plain black underglaze. It obviously works better than the licorice - it doesn't get pulled into the surrounding glaze and the line maintains its integrity.














As for the other bowl I was working on - the one with the arabesque lines on it - I was contemplating doing some carving around the edge of where I wanted my decoration to go but then thought against it.

Incidentally, I actually had a dream of what to do with the bowl. I know, weird right? What can I say. My subconscious never seems to stop working on problems. And this actually isn't the first time my dreams have led me to pots. This pot came out of sensations of movement while I was laying half asleep one night, several years ago:


I realize that probably sounds pretty corny, but I can assure you, I'm not someone who's big into dream interpretation or anything of that nature. My subconscious just does what it does and if I'm lucky, it shares with my conscious.

But, I digress. Back to the arabesque bowl. I'll make some with the alterations I'm considering, and pair that with some of the glaze combinations from these little bowls. So stay tuned to see where it goes!

For information on the glazes I'm currently testing, please see this post
If you are interested in trying any of these in your own studio, you should also have a look at this post.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

In the Beginning...

And so it begins!

This is the first official post in a series of writings I will be doing on my approach to glaze testing and how it informs the development of my work. I have two separate things on the go right now, and this post will deal with the first one.

In the beginning comes the first hint of an idea. This is where my sketch book and a giant box of pencil crayons come in handy. My mind has been juggling several different things for a while now. First of all, I've been studying my new line of work and can't seem to shake the urge to draw flowers all over it. This is not new for me. I love pattern, and am very attracted to the idea of layering, with inspiration coming from both the fashion industry and fancy-schmancy wallpapers. So here's what my brain spits out:


A window of glossy stripes with a flower in the corner, to go with my slate matte glaze that I'm totally in love with despite all its flaws. But the longer I looked at this image, the more I realized it doesn't work. At all.

So the other thing that has been whirring around in my brain is how to combine the two, very distinct, lines of work that I have going on right now. So that got me thinking about adding some Arabesque lines rather than the flowers. And here's where that idea took me:


And:


Which then led to these:


And these:


These images got me rather excited so now begins to process of determining how to go about translating these images onto the clay. I'm pretty sure I want to go with some black underglaze, or maybe even some black glaze for the Arabesque lines and the pinstripes. As for the colored glazes, at this point I'm thinking maybe some kind of interesting matte glaze in the narrow stripes, and a crackle glaze in the wider stripes. The colors I'm interested in are a soft pink, maybe a burgundy, or Merlot color, a medium blue, and a vibrant turquoise for the crackle glaze. For the matte glaze, I'm interested in perhaps a lime green, an orange, or maybe even some crazy red.

Getting an idea of the colors I'm after will help determine what type of base glazes I want to start testing. As for the crackle glaze, I just happen to have a soft pink crackle that I had been using on Christmas ornaments, the color coming from erbium, one of the rare earth metals. As for the burgundy and Merlot, I'll definitely need to use stains. Okay. No problem there. But because of the nature of those colors, I need to make sure my base glaze is compatible with the stains to get the color I'm after. Enough calcium. Check. High in the alkaline department. Also check.

Here's the glaze recipe I'll start my testing with:
it's called Kittens Clear Gloss, attributed to Kathy King:

Nepheline Syenite: 30
Wollastonite: 8
Gerstley Borate: 21
EPK: 10
Flint: 31
Strontium Carbonate: 15

As for the mattes I'll try, I want something with more visual interest, not just a matte surface. I have a recipe called Val Cushing's Cry, which a dry, sparkly matte, and another recipe that's a stunning barium matte called Super Dry Matte.

Here's those recipes:

Val Cushing's Cry:
Silica: 10
Nepheline Syenite: 25
NC-4 Feldspar: 25
Zinc: 25
Titanium Dioxide: 5
Whiting: 10
(now even though this one has a bunch of zinc in it - which can be detrimental to colour - I figure I'd give it a try anyways. What can I say. I like the sparkles.)

Super Dry Matte:
Nepheline Syenite: 59.6
Barium Carbonate: 21.1
Calcined Kaolin: 7.7
Flint: 5.8
Lithium Carbonate: 5.8

I've obviously got a lot of tests to mix up. I have on hand some Blackberry Wine stain, some Deep Crimson stain, some praseodymium oxide, some orange stain, some crazy red stain, some cobalt, some copper and some chrome to get me started. So stay tuned! If you have any questions about the glazes, feel free to ask away!

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Where the heck did summer go?!!?!!

Okay. So basically summer's over. And exactly where the hell have I been, you're wondering?

My summer has been incredibly hectic. I spent three days a week at an art fair in Stratford, Ontario. Which doesn't really leave me a lot of time for making work, packing and shipping orders, glazing and firing, keeping up with my paperwork, and definitely NO time for keeping up with my blog posts.
My most sincere apologies.

BUT, here's a taste of what I have been working on...

I've tried my hand at casseroles, and I can honestly say I never thought I'd be so excited by them! Working on several different sizes, including an individual one.


I've also been working on my feltware collection. Here's a little covered jar from an anemone series I'm working on. People seem to be a little weirded out by the anemones but I'm having fun. I've also got some other pieces in this series I"ll post soon.

AND.....
there's some functional feltware...


I decided that rather than felting the wool right onto the porcelain, I'd make it removable. This, after listening to customers at shows. So thanks everyone for the feedback! On the left is a travel mug. It was tough getting the top to fit, especially with porcelain's tendency to warp, and I'll admit out of 4, only one was round enough to fit the lid snugly. This guy now happily resides in Michigan! The other pieces are dessert bowls. I fell in love with frozen cherries this summer as a refreshing treat... little bit of brown sugar on them, YUM! But I found I had to wrap my bowl in a towel because it got so cold and there was a lot of condensation on it. So voila! Hand felted cozies that perfectly fit the bowls. Just wash them like you would a wool sweater, in cold water, and then stretch them over the bowls to dry. Perfect for ice cream or even hot apple crisp, or a steaming bowl of soup in the fall to keep you warm!

With all of the fun I've been having taking my work in a new direction, I have found I've come full circle and have added several new pieces to my Arabesque line as well. And you remember some of these tests I did a while back? I've found my way back there and using some techniques involving transfer paper. I have some ideas on how to incorporate this into my work so we'll see how this works out over the next little while.

Making new and different pieces has been very invigorating. It's been really hard to "fit" in the time to make them, but has been well worth the effort and stress it caused. And with the hectic fall/Christmas schedule I have lined up, it will important for me to take these creative diversions for my own sanity.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Maintaining My Creative Sanity and the Introduction of Feltware

Well. I've been making my current line of work for about 4 years now. I still get excited when my kiln is finally cool enough for me to peek inside. It still feels like Christmas when I finally get to unload it. And, I am still learning when it comes to my decoration, glaze application, throwing, trimming, and even my slab work. I've done my best to add some new pieces ever six months or so, but despite all my efforts, I absolutely fear the inevitable boredom that comes from doing repetitive work. I know its coming, and I dread its arrival.

Last year, I finally decided to get serious about this looming issue (Okay, LATE last year!). I am now making a conscious effort to work on NEW pieces. The year began with me adding a glaze test to at least one kiln load a week. Since I don't have a lot of 'extra' time for playing, this snail's pace turned out to be as fast as I needed to go. With glazes coming out of the kiln, ideas began to swirl, and after following several paths for a brief while, I've narrowed it down to a new line that I'm going to explore.

I call it Feltware.

I fell in love with knitting about 7 years ago when I moved back to Ontario from B.C. It gave my hands something to do during the week when I couldn't be in my studio. Once I got to be in the studio full time, however, my hands just couldn't muster up the strength to knit in the evenings. But I still found myself drawn to wool as a material.

Enter: felting.

MUCH easier on the hands. And results come a lot faster than just knitting. I started felting about the same time I started trying out the new glaze tests. The ideas merged and this is the results:


The bands of felt are actually felted right to these cups. They make a perfect barrier against the heat from a hot cup of tea or the freezing cold from a tall pint of beer. And they are just the beginning. I have some ideas of where I want to take the shapes, and of other forms that I could apply this technique to. I'm super excited!

Once I found my direction, branching into another line of work was not as daunting as I thought it would be. But like I just said, ONCE I found my path. Ask any artist and they will probably tell you they have more ideas than they know what to do with. So narrowing them down, to accommodate limited time can be a challenge, to say the least.

I'm happy with where I'm going with this work. There's a LOT of potential here for me. And while I can only move at a snail's pace in terms of making work different from my main line, I now have a direction to go in. And with that direction comes the motivation to MAKE that time.

Watch my etsy shop, I'll be posting these soon!