Does anyone have any experience with multiple investment firings?
How many times can you reinvest and then reheat red before it color strikes black/grey? If you avoid the high temperatures will it prevent it from striking? Is the selinium colors the only thing that strikes on reheat?
Delores wrote:Does anyone have any experience with multiple investment firings?
How many times can you reinvest and then reheat red before it color strikes black/grey? If you avoid the high temperatures will it prevent it from striking? Is the selinium colors the only thing that strikes on reheat?
Thanks
There was a lot of chat on old old board on this
Also a search on craftweb on striking might B enlighening
But do remember most of the chat there is hot work
Delores wrote:Does anyone have any experience with multiple investment firings?
How many times can you reinvest and then reheat red before it color strikes black/grey? If you avoid the high temperatures will it prevent it from striking? Is the selinium colors the only thing that strikes on reheat?
Thanks
There was a lot of chat on old old board on this
Also a search on craftweb on striking might B enlighening
But do remember most of the chat there is hot work
In hot glass striking usually occurs as a matter of how hot you get the glass as opposed to the amount of reheating. I'm sure it depends on what kind of glass you are using though - are you using Gaffer casting glass?
In hot glass striking usually occurs as a matter of how hot you get the glass as opposed to the amount of reheating. I'm sure it depends on what kind of glass you are using though - are you using Gaffer casting glass?
Barb
No I'm using Bullseye but thought the info I had on Gaffers applied to the color red in general. In the archives the temperature was the issue but haven't seen anything on the range that is the break point for color striking, or if it's a time issue in the higher ranges as some post in the archives suggest.
Hmmm well I don't know whether BE will strike and if it does, at what temp. The only striking reds I've dealt with are Kugler and gaffer hot glass. Maybe Lani can help you with this?
I've had the catherdral strike to opal (red). I'm using BE. Once it has striken it doesn't really continue to shift, but my work only goes through one high fire. That is the only color I use that does this.
Last Oct. @ SOFA I had a conversation with Miriam DiFiore about red frit. Keep in mind she is using fusing temps. and firing many many times. She told me that the red would continue to strike with each additional firing. I believe she is using BE.
I've had the catherdral strike to opal (red). I'm using BE. Once it has striken it doesn't really continue to shift, but my work only goes through one high fire. That is the only color I use that does this.
Last Oct. @ SOFA I had a conversation with Miriam DiFiore about red frit. Keep in mind she is using fusing temps. and firing many many times. She told me that the red would continue to strike with each additional firing. I believe she is using BE.
Good luck,
Amy
I've done my second firing without problems but I'm not going into the full fuse range and so far so good but it might be two steps forward and three back, who knows but thanks for the feedback. Desided I'd do the Brock thing and go lower longer. But the above is most helpful, so thanks for your feedback.
Delores wrote:Does anyone have any experience with multiple investment firings?
How many times can you reinvest and then reheat red before it color strikes black/grey? If you avoid the high temperatures will it prevent it from striking? Is the selinium colors the only thing that strikes on reheat?
Thanks
There was a lot of chat on old old board on this
Also a search on craftweb on striking might B enlighening
But do remember most of the chat there is hot work
Thanks, I give both another once over
Whats happening is something like this
U got metal in solution or metal as real metal
When U strike it swaps over
Thee is other weird stuff as well all a bit complex
In hot glass U can re heat a bit n get a change only in one part say a rim
All very intersting
Potters can spend there lives with copper n reduction 2 get amasing reds