What is shivering in glaze?

Shivering is a ceramic glaze defect that results in tiny flakes of glaze peeling off edges of ceramic ware. It happens because the thermal expansion of the body is too much higher than the glaze.
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How do you stop glaze from shaking?

In most instances, shivering can be corrected by additions of feldspar, frit or other high-expansion materials to the glaze. If the problem persists, the solution is to adjust the clay body recipe or change to another clay body altogether.
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What is the crackling glaze effect called?

Craquelure (French: craquelé, Italian: crettatura) is a fine pattern of dense cracking formed on the surface of materials. It can be a result of drying, aging, intentional patterning, or a combination of all three.
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What causes bubbles in glaze?

A runny glaze is blistering on the inside of a large bowl

It is percolating at top temperature (during the temperature-hold period), forming bubbles. There is enough surface tension to maintain them all the way down to the body, and for as long as the temperature is held.
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What is crawling in glaze?

Crawling. Crawling is caused by a high index of surface tension in the melting glaze. It is triggered by adhesion problems, often caused by bad application. It occurs where a glaze is excessively powdery and does not fully adhere to the surface of the clay.
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Understanding Pottery Chapter 19 Glaze Defects



What happens if you over fired glaze?

Overfiring results in glazes that begin to run. The glaze coat may be thinner at the top of the pot and thicker at the bottom. Glaze may even run off the pot and drip onto the kiln shelf or other pots. Seriously overfired pots may show ​pinholing and pitting as the glaze reaches evaporation temperature.
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Why is my glaze cracking while drying?

When a glaze cracks as it dries on a pot, it usually means that the glaze is shrinking too much. This is normally caused by having too much plastic material (ball clay) in the glaze. If this is the problem, it should exist from the beginning (not appear two months later).
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How is crackle glaze made?

Crazing is a crack pattern caused by thermal expansion mismatch between body and glaze. After the glaze solidifies (as the kiln cools) it shrinks more than the body. To relieve the tension of being stretched, it cracks. Crackle glazes are typically found on ware fired at low temperatures.
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Why does glaze flake off before firing?

It happens because the thermal expansion of the clay body is incompatible with the glaze or underglaze (e.g. the bisque and glaze shrink or expand at different rates). Most things expand when hot and shrink/contract when cool. A clay body and glaze fuse together during firing.
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Why is my glaze crazing?

Crazing is caused by the glaze being under too much tension. This tension occurs when the glaze contracts more than the body during cooling. Because glazes are a very thin coating, most will pull apart ar craze under very little tension.
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Why is my glaze peeling?

When a glaze shivers it is under 'extreme compression' as it cools, peeling off the underlying clay body. This defect is most prevalent on pottery lips and handles, which are the areas of highest surface tension as the glaze hardens upon cooling.
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Can you use a hair dryer to remove bubbles from resin?

If there's one thing resin bubbles can't stand, it's the heat. You can actually use a hair dryer to pop bubbles; however, the heat a hairdryer provides is less potent than that of a butane or propane torch.
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How do you reduce bubbles in resin?

If the resin is cool, use a warm bucket of water and place the resin and hardener bottles into the warm water. This will prevent microbubbles. The working time* of the resin mixture will go from 45 minutes, down to 30 minutes.
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How soon can you fire after glazing?

Some potters will put their glazed ware straight into the kiln and fire it immediately. However, glaze contains water, and this is absorbed by bisque ware when glaze is applied. Ideally, leave your pottery overnight after glazing to allow this water to evaporate. Or add a pre-heat to your firing schedule.
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What happens if there is too much or too little alumina in a glaze?

If a glaze contains too much Al2O3 , then it may not melt enough (but will likely be more hard and durable if firing temperature is increased). If a glaze has inadequate Al2O3 , then it is likely that it will lack hardness and strength at any temperature.
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Is crazing a bad thing?

Technically crazing is considered a defect in the glaze and can weaken the item. It may also harbor bacteria. So if you are buying pieces to use for serving food you should look for uncrazed pieces.
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Can I glaze fire twice?

To summarize, it's possible to glaze fire pottery twice or even multiple times. Fired pottery can be glazed several times to add textures, accents, and effects, and multiple firings are possible.
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What happens if your glaze is too thick?

Fluid melt glazes will run off ware if applied too thick. Glazes having a thermal expansion lower than the body, and thickly applied on the inside of vessels, can fracture the piece during kiln cooling. Those having a higher expansion than the body will often craze if applied too thick.
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