Venting the kiln, Loading the kiln – Elmer's Glass Kiln User Manual

Page 7

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The Optional

Glass View Port

Caution: Wear fir-

ing safety glasses

whenever looking

into the optional

view port.

Maximum tempera-

ture for a kiln with view

port is 1700°F/926°C.

Firing hotter will damage the glass. See page 17 for glass port

maintenance instructions.

Loading the Kiln

Place Ware on a Protective Shelf

Always protect the firing chamber by firing your pieces on

a shelf or in a bowl. Do not place the pieces directly on the

bottom of the firing chamber.

Types of shelves and containers:

Fiber Shelf

Place the standard fi-

ber shelf directly onto the

kiln bottom. This shelf is

used to support silver and

gold clay.

Note: Fire only silver

or gold clay on the fi-

ber shelf—never ce-

ramics, enameling or glass. Do not coat the fiber

shelf with glass separator or kiln wash.

Fireclay Shelf

Ceramic

fireclay

shelves, available from

Sundance protect the fir-

ing chamber bottom and

provide a smooth surface.

Use a ceramic shelf in

your jewelry kiln to fire ce-

ramics, glass, and enameling.
Insulating Firebrick

Piece

Insulating firebricks

are porous, light-weight,

and can be shaped to sup-

port delicate silver clay

designs. Carve the fire-

brick with a knife or hack-

saw.
Ceramic Bowl

You can purchase an unglazed, small ceramic bisque

bowl from a ceramic supply store. The bowl will last through

many firings. Use it to hold alumina hydrate. You can also

shape hot glass by slumping it into the bowl.

Note: Ceramic shelves and bowls and insulating

firebricks may slow the firing. They absorb more

heat than the ceramic fiber shelf. They also cool

more slowly than the fiber shelf.

Applying Glass Separator or Kiln Wash

Glass and ceramics are fired on a fireclay kiln shelf and

not directly on the kiln bottom. You can also slump glass over

a mold, such as a bowl. The kiln shelf and sagging mold must

be coated with glass separator to keep glass or ceramic glaze

from sticking to them.

A coat of glass separator or

kiln wash will usually last

through several firings. When

the shelf coating begins to

crack or chip, apply a fresh

coat.

When recoating a shelf, re-

move most of the old coating

with grit cloth (available from

sundance). This is an abra-

sive-coated mesh that allows

residue to pass through. Removing the old coating gives you

a smooth surface to start with. Then recoat the shelf using

the following directions. (Both glass separator and kiln wash

will be referred to as “separator.”)

Caution: Do not apply glass separator or kiln wash

to the ceramic fiber firing chamber or to the bottom

of the shelf! Contact with glass separator or kiln

wash can ruin the embedded heating element.
Note: Do not coat the soft ceramic fiber shelf with

separator. If you are firing only silver or gold clay,

you do not need separator. When firing silver clay

with glass, however, fire the piece on a hard fireclay

shelf coated with separator.

1 Mix the separator with water following the directions

on the bag. Stir.

2 Use a haik brush or a soft

paint brush to apply the

separator to the shelf.

(The haik brush is easier

to use because it lays

down a more even coat-

ing.) Each time you dip

your brush into the sepa-

rator mixture, swirl the

brush around the bottom

of the container. This is

because the separator settles quickly. Use two or

three thin coats changing the direction of the brush

stroke 90° with each coat.

3 Dry the shelf before firing. To speed drying, place the

shelf on three ½” posts inside the kiln. Heat at full

rate to 300°F/148°C and hold for five minutes. Then

turn off the kiln and leave the shelf inside.

7

Separator lasts through several

glass firings. Apply new separator

when the old coat begins to flake.

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