.
Both:
Bisque fire, glaze, Glost fire
No, clay has to be fired and then glazed and fired again.
Yes.
the properties of clay are; ( before it has been fiered ) it is natural not man made it is soft it is permeable
To add colour to clay, it is best to allow the clay to dry completely, crush it to a powder, mix the dry colour powder and then rehydrate. Wear a mask, clay dust is harmful.You can also add wet colours to clay slip, the hardest thing is adding colours to clay when it is plastic.Mostly however the clay is not coloured, instead you colour the pot using slips or glazes.
Miry Clay is known as sticky clay.
depends on what you are trying to bake and what temperature the oven is set to
Bake Off - 2013 was released on: USA: 2013
Clay is pretty waterproof already, but to make it truly so, dry it and bake a glaze on it inside and out.
No, you sculpt the clay first and then bake it once you are through with your work of art.
Yes, but if you want to glaze the clay you have to fire it at a low before you glaze it so it is hard - ish.
True
Yes.
It depends. How thick are the slices? What's in the glaze?
Clay (real clay that comes from the ground, not a plastic product) is fired in a kiln, not "baked in a oven." After is is fired it is called pottery or ceramic. Different types of clay fire at different temperatures and different lengths of time. Most are fired two times: first at a lower temperature and then at a higher temperature with glaze on the surface (sometimes the reverse). Some pottery does not have glaze, and some is only fired once.
No, you can not.
Glaze.
Crawling is a glaze defect in which the glaze separates, leaving portions of bare clay exposed.
no you can not bake kamset clay
yes you can bake clay that you made at home then eat it