As you can see, the cup came out with a number of other Oribe based pieces with deep, shiny surfaces with not a single pinhole and truth be told, I am glad I decided to refire these pots, most of which I am much happier with now than I was just a few short days ago. A fellow collector asked me about when I was happy with my work and I told him, the feeling is always short lived but I must admit, I was happy with this little cup that could for more than the usual five minutes and it is likely to become my new bourbon cup for the foreseeable future for at least eleven minutes into the future.
Wednesday, April 24, 2024
THE LITTLE CUP THAT COULD
Illustrated
is a small "bourbon" cup with a slightly troubled past. Starting at
the beginning this cup was from a group of pieces thrown off the hump using a
small batch, gritty, sandy clay, most were facetted of which for some reason, I
thought this was the best of the group. Being the top of the class as it were,
I decided to go with the tried and true Oribe with iron and along with some 45
other pots, it was loaded and fired. Once unloaded, I realized that the very
bottom of the kiln was slightly underfired and I decided to put this aside and
fire it again to see what would develope. Loaded again and then midway through
the firing we had a power outage leading to the loss of nearly the entire kiln
load or really about 75% of the contents. For what ever the reasons are, most
of my glazes do not fair well when they are firing and the temperature drops
quickly leading to bad pinholes and a rather dull, muddy surface and are even
worse when refired. As I was surveying
the bad to worse result, I decided to just hang on to this cup and several
other pieces to refire next glaze fire to see what the results may be and in
this case, third time is a charm (?).
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