My friend Janet gave me a selection of crab shells picked up on a Falmouth beach the other day. She suggested that they might make a nice palette if I could duplicate the colors on my Shino-glazed pots. I'll have to investigate combinations of red Shino recipes, kiln reduction, carbon-trapping, varying clay bodies and all the rest of the variables that go into the surprises that come out of using Shinos, but if we could come close to this range of colors, it would be lovely. Meanwhile, the shells themselves are wonderful.
Kiln is Loaded, Pilots are Lit!
4 days ago
8 comments:
I believe that I would prefer a glaze that looked like Janet's brownies rather than the copper red crabs!
I love those shino glazes. Maybe you could do a crab crawl shino:) great looking pots in that firing!
what a beautiful picture! such vivid, bright colors. shinos are my favorite glaze.
Finnegan, you are fixated on baked goods. Of course, you've had Janet's brownies, hence the enthusiasm.
And I like Crab Crawl Shino for a name, Tracey. Now to find a recipe that merits it.
Those are stunning colors, aren't they, Amy?
Nice Idea and worth investigating does that mean you have to turn the pots on their sides as well?
be careful with the marketing as well you could find yourself in trouble.
I'll have to think about that one, Paul. And would the pots have to move sideways, like crabs?
it looks like you've already got the color of the second crab from the right
I think you're right, Jim. The trick will be to get all the colors together in one firing. Or on one pot.
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