depends on the type of glass, and only special types of glaze can be used
To install glass in a window is "to glaze". By analogy, it also means to cover a food in a candied coating, e.g., glazed ham.
Francis W Glaze has written: 'Optical glass at the National Bureau of Standards' -- subject(s): Optical glass
You should not put glaze on the bottom of a clay pot where it will come into direct contact with surfaces when placed down for firing. The glaze could cause the pot to stick to the kiln shelf during firing and result in damage to both the pot and the kiln.
Glaze paintings can be a great accessory/decoration in a home. Glaze painting is a painting that is painted with a special paint that which is melted glass colored.
First you would paint the vase with a glaze. Then you must put it in a kiln for a specified amount of time in order to set the glaze.
First lightly sand the desired area, this is so the glaze has something to hold on to. Then apply glaze using a putty knife. I put flaxseed oil on my putty knife when I glaze so when I press the glaze down it slides off the knife easier.
The glass in a frame. Commonly the window of a house or the glaze.The word Glaze means any extra surface coating on a thing .....Like doughnut gets a soft sugar glaze ... while a clay pot gets a liquid glaze heated into a Hard glaze.....or the runner had a glaze of sweat on his face...... um Oh yes... glass too is known as glaze so too is the putty used to seal it into its frame....I can only assume they get this odd usage of the word because the glass is an extra coating on the building
The glaze only needs to be warm, so, to avoid burning it, put it on during the last five or ten minutes of baking the ham.
the Glaze on Ceramic tile is mostly Glass, but Glass is presumably ALL glass. They should both be HIGHLY resistant to Calcium deposits and very robust in their ability to stand up to cleaning Glass may have the slight edge due to its smoother finish over Tile Glaze Neither tile, especially the glass ones should be cleaned with glass beads.
Sealer is applied on top of the glaze & does not penetrate the glass Glaze, so over time & with use & cleaning it will wear off. so YES!
You should put glaze on polymer clay after baking and cooling it completely. The glaze adds a shiny or matte finish to your polymer clay creations and helps protect them from wear and tear. Apply the glaze using a soft brush or sponge in thin, even coats for best results.
You glaze pastry to put a nice shine on the finished product. and you need to use the correct amount of glazing or it will burn and look very bad.