Satellite Unique Lead Free Opaque Glass Enamels
Posted: Sat Dec 06, 2003 12:22 am
I've been playing with the Satellite/Unique lead free enamels the last couple of days, trying to get the hang of it, and am having some problems. I'm not sure if it's the way I'm applying the enamels or if its the enamels themselves.
Here's the problems I've been having. In the instructions, it says to thin them to the consistency of milk. The first time I tried them, I did that. They were transparent instead of opaque and uneven in color.
So the second time I used them, I didn't thin them and applied them fairly heavily on the surface exactly the way they come out of the jar. The instructions say to "flow" them onto the glass instead of brushing them on. I interpreted this is meaning that you should load the tip of the brush with the enamel and let it sort of naturally puddle onto the glass. Is that what they meant by "flowing" it onto the glass? Should I have let the first coat dry and applied a second coat?
This time after firing, the enamels were sometimes opaque and sometimes transparent. They were very uneven, and were very transparent around the edges where I had to apply them very carefully and couldn't really "flow" them on and keep the enamels within the area I was trying to color.
Is this problem I'm having related to the way I'm applying them or has someone else tried these and had similar experiences? What I really like about them is that they're premixed and water based. No smelly medium to contend with. LOL.
Any help or ideas about applying these enamels with brushes and getting even coverage would be much appreciated.
Geri
Here's the problems I've been having. In the instructions, it says to thin them to the consistency of milk. The first time I tried them, I did that. They were transparent instead of opaque and uneven in color.
So the second time I used them, I didn't thin them and applied them fairly heavily on the surface exactly the way they come out of the jar. The instructions say to "flow" them onto the glass instead of brushing them on. I interpreted this is meaning that you should load the tip of the brush with the enamel and let it sort of naturally puddle onto the glass. Is that what they meant by "flowing" it onto the glass? Should I have let the first coat dry and applied a second coat?
This time after firing, the enamels were sometimes opaque and sometimes transparent. They were very uneven, and were very transparent around the edges where I had to apply them very carefully and couldn't really "flow" them on and keep the enamels within the area I was trying to color.
Is this problem I'm having related to the way I'm applying them or has someone else tried these and had similar experiences? What I really like about them is that they're premixed and water based. No smelly medium to contend with. LOL.
Any help or ideas about applying these enamels with brushes and getting even coverage would be much appreciated.
Geri