My clear turns milky if it is to thick , so try adding some more water to it.
If it is bubbly, fire it longer and maybe a little higher. All Raku glazes bubble up as they
heat up. You usally have a window to watch it fire. Keep firing till it lays down smooth
as glass.
a kiln or perhaps a pottery wheel. But much pottery is cast in a mould, then freed and fired.
greenware
Usually, broken pieces of baked, or fired, terracotta containers.
Brown or black marks on fired pottery are usually caused by mineral impurities, usually iron.
Kiln
no no definitely NOT...and just to be clear he isn't fired at all watch RAW No
a kiln or perhaps a pottery wheel. But much pottery is cast in a mould, then freed and fired.
greenware
Called a kiln.
It prevented pottery from cracking when fired.
It prevented pottery from cracking when fired.
Ancient pottery shows movement of the earth's magnetic field. Firing the pottery fixes the ambient magnetic field in the fired pottery.
The coils of clay prevented the pottery from cracking when fired.
Usually, broken pieces of baked, or fired, terracotta containers.
it prevented pottery from cracking when fired
It prevented pottery from cracking when fired.
Brown or black marks on fired pottery are usually caused by mineral impurities, usually iron.