Equipping Your Ceramic Workshop

For making ceramic you do not need a big and heavy machine. You can easily collect all the tools from nearby market or it may be available in your home. In the following article you will find what the things that you need to collect.

Here's a list of materials you will find useful in your workshop: an inexpensive rolling pin which can be purchased at most chain stores and toy shops: pie plates: toothpicks; building plaster; an orange stick; a piece of ordinary, unsoaped steel wool; a sheet of grade 00 sandpaper; a paring knife; a scraper or spatula; a coarse sponge and a small facial sponge; some crocks or large Mason jars. You probably have most of these things already in the home.

A plastic or crockery pitcher will also find use in the workshop, as will a galvanized pail and a few cheap mixing bowls. If a pitcher is not readily available, you can substitute a large tin can with a lacquered inner surface. By pinching the rim of the lidless can, you will form a pouring spout.

If you plan to do much work with solid clay, it will be worth while to make yourself a wedging wire. Before clay is shaped it must always be wedged. This is a method of mixing a mass of clay thoroughly by cutting it in half and slamming the two pieces together on the work surface with the cut edges in opposite directions. This is done in order to remove all air pockets and holes which would cause a piece to explode when fired, and to secure an even consistency.

A wedging wire is used to slice blocks of clay into two. Of course a knife can be used, but not as handily or effectively. This device is easily constructed by attaching dowel handles to the ends of a 12-inch piano wire, about 18 gauges.

The more ambitious ceramist can go a step further and build a wedging board, which serves the same purpose but is a more permanent fixture in the workshop. You can make a simple one by constructing a 6-inch deep wooden box measuring about 15x26 inches, and fastening at the back an upright post measuring about 1x2x18 inches. At the top of the vertical rod, secure a piece of non-rusting wire, not thinner than 12 gauge. The other end of the wire is stretched to the front of the box and fastened taut. Use a turnbuckle or a wing nut to tighten the wire.

The wedging board should be weighted by filling the box with plaster (mixed, perhaps, with gravel or small rocks). When using the board to cut clay, always start under the wire and draw the clay toward you. Thus, any bit of clay flicked out by the wire will be thrown away from you rather than hitting you in the face.

You must have to maintain more carefulness while using these tools, it may cause you harm if not used as it is to be. After creating things by your own self it will give you more pleasure and happiness than buying from market, no matter whether it is in perfect shape or not.

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About the Author

Mitch Johnson is a regular writer for http://www.curtains-n-drapes.com/ , http://www.urceramicsguide.info/ , http://www.ezceramicsguide.info/



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