I mark the mandrels and make notes in a book I keep by the torch.
It's especially good for those tricky silver glasses.
Sometimes, however it's good in other cases too ... .
This is CiM Thunder Egg. Ooooh - pretty colour - like paler version of Poseidon. Thunder Egg below, Poseidon on top.
Let's just whip off a couple of beads. Pull 'em out of the kiln the next day. Hmmm - wait a minute. Recheck notes. Two self spacers, 3rd, white core, encased Thunder Egg, with raked pattern of silvered ivory. Thunder Egg. Blue.
Hmmmm. Not blue.
Ahhhh - maybe check CiM's website. Thunder Egg - an Opal Light Sky Blue - click for more. Ok, clicking on more and wondering wtf ...
" ... strikes to a grey to mink colour"
Well - whaddya know? There is, in fact, almost no trace of the opal sky blue, and it is pretty thoroughly Mink coloured.
Some folks report that Mink plays well with silver. I guess that I should try silver with Thunder Egg and see what happens.
Wow - flat out one of the most completely unexpected colour changes I've ever had.
I guess the question is now, how to keep it blue. Because the Creation is Messy page show samples that are blue or only partially struck. So there has to be a way!
I think the samples on the CiM site where it has stayed blue (apart from the spacers) have been encased. Maybe it doesn't strike to brown if it's covered in clear?
ReplyDeleteI imagine to keep it blue in spacer form, you have to shape and then immediately garage with no reheating whatsoever!
Simple yet so elegant!
ReplyDelete@Melanie - interesting thoughts - worth trying!
ReplyDelete