The short answer: Yes. The medium long answer: You have to be careful with temperatures and the glazes you use so that they are compatible and it may take some trials to get things right.
yes , u can put many laries of glazes over each other but u must know the firing temprature for each one and its chemical analysis To determine the outcome
Depends on exactly what you mean ---- of course you cannot really remove the fired glaze and then apply another one but it is often possible to paint ceramic colours onto a fired item and then re-fire it. If its very old then there may be a problem with cracking of the pot or crazing of the glaze. In the end you just have to try it and hope for the best!
The way to tell if a ceramic tile has glaze or not is to look at it and touch it. An unglazed tile witll have a rough feel and dull look to it. A glazed one will have a shiny look and feel smooth.
The correct spelling is "porcelain" (ceramic, usually with a smooth exterior glaze).
For ceramics, there's the fritted glaze, low, mid, and hi fire glaze, and the Underglaze or Overglaze. For dessert, there's ganache, frosting/icing, and fruit glaze.
yes , u can put many laries of glazes over each other but u must know the firing temprature for each one and its chemical analysis To determine the outcome
Depends on exactly what you mean ---- of course you cannot really remove the fired glaze and then apply another one but it is often possible to paint ceramic colours onto a fired item and then re-fire it. If its very old then there may be a problem with cracking of the pot or crazing of the glaze. In the end you just have to try it and hope for the best!
Ceramic crawling is a glaze defect that occurs when the glaze pulls away from the surface of the ceramic during firing, leaving patches where the glaze did not adhere. This can happen due to poor glaze application, dust or oil contamination on the surface, or incompatible materials.
It depends. Does she look rough under the glaze? If so she is ceramic
No, since glaze is a process that requires it to be fired. There are professionals who use an epoxy on glazed ceramic to change colors if that is what you want to achieve.
varnish, pva glue, some glaze
The way to tell if a ceramic tile has glaze or not is to look at it and touch it. An unglazed tile witll have a rough feel and dull look to it. A glazed one will have a shiny look and feel smooth.
The correct spelling is "porcelain" (ceramic, usually with a smooth exterior glaze).
Chase Brown is an artist that uses glaze. The art that he creates is ceramic, he glazes and uses fire to heat his ceramics, this makes every one unique.
For ceramics, there's the fritted glaze, low, mid, and hi fire glaze, and the Underglaze or Overglaze. For dessert, there's ganache, frosting/icing, and fruit glaze.
. Both: Bisque fire, glaze, Glost fire
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!