| 
 I will send practical posts like these (from thousands I maintain). No ads or tracking. We are troubleshooting the confirm email, for now you will be subscribed immediately (the first monthly email will provide one-click unsubscribe). 
 Blog
Turning a cruise into a "Potters Celebration Trip"
 
In 2024-25 my wife and I have been on three cruises from Vancouver. Our driving speed of 2-3 days from here (there and back) slows to 4-5 days when we visit potters along the way. The trip this fall was awesome. I cannot believe how resourceful, determined and talented some of our long-time customers are. And I did not stop to think how long some of them have been studio potters (more than 50 or even 60 years). We try to spread our morning coffee out over these and others I have gotten recently (with a preference for those made from Candian clays, of course). It's a real joy to have served you all. We have more trips planned this and next year, so I hope to see many more of you. 
 
Context: Celebration Posters Project 
Friday 24th October 2025 
 
Can engobes be applied to bisque?
 
Engobes can be incredibly opaque. This very thin layer of L3685Z2 completely covers these terra cottas (L210 and L215). It's color is whiter than paper! Using my G1916Q and G3879 clear overglazes, ware can appear as white as porcelain! But notice there are tiny cracks in the white on the edges of contours (most noticeable on the left sample). It appears to work well when applied to the bisque (because I added CMC gum), but during firing, it shrinks 2%, putting it under tension (the body had already shrunk during its bisque). If it were applied to the leather-hard ware that would not fix the problem. Why? Because the body shrinks 4%, that would put it under compression, looking for opportunities to flake off at edges (e.g. rims of mugs). How to optimize this? The engobe needs about 3% Ferro Frit 3110 to raise its firing shrinkage by 2%. And, to be applied to leather-hard ware. 
 
Context: Match the firing shrinkage.. 
Monday 13th October 2025 
 
Transparent over-glaze for cone 6 stoneware
Is a good one even possible on brush decorated ware?
 
The mug on the right is terra cotta slipware fired at cone 04 using underglazes and a leaded transparent over-glaze (lead glazes are still commonly used in many parts of the world and considered safe there). Mug on the left: This potter wants to use the same technique on cone 6 stoneware. This is a typical transparent glaze (fluxed using a frit or Gerstley Borate). The result is micro-bubble clouding, boron blue, washed-out colors and surface defects. Because it is a dipping glaze it went on too thick and didn't cover well over the colored brushstrokes. However, achieving better warm browns is possible. A more refractory underglaze (made with stains, not iron oxide) that does not bleed. A more fluid melt transparent glaze that is better able to shed bubbles. A drop-and-hold firing would reduce surface defects. Finally, careful control of the glaze thickness and quality of laydown. To achieve the latter, it might be worth preparing the transparent as a brushing glaze, at least for application on the outsides (enabling a dense and even laydown over the whole surface). 
 
Context: Why dipping transparent glazes.., Underglazes require a fluid.., The right transparent glaze.., Engobe, Underglaze 
Tuesday 23rd September 2025 
 
Stains are better in black glazes
5% stain vs 15% metal oxides
 
Consider the hazards and hassles before choosing a black matte or gloss recipe that has high individual or combined percentages of manganese dioxide, cobalt or nickel. 
 
Gloss blacks: These are super popular right now as the base for layering of reactive glazes. DIY dipping versions thus make a lot of sense. They make even more sense when they don’t turn to jelly in the bucket because of the high percentage of red iron oxide in all blacks made using metal oxide colorants. And when the total percentage of pigment is as high, or higher than 15%. And when the pigments cause crystallization (especially when overloaded). 
 
Matte blacks: The human eye can detect even slight differences in the degree of matteness (which is very difficult to keep consistent). Raw metal oxides affect the matteness, especially when overloaded with pigment. They are prone to cutlery marking if too matte. By using stains manufacturers, and even potters, have learned to tune recipes (lower left) and firing schedules to achieve consistency and functionality (even tourist souvenirs (lower right) feature them now). With stains, only one material is producing the color, its percentage (which can be as low as 4%) can be tuned.  
 
Context: Ceramic Stain Toxicity Label.., Control matteness by glaze.., Heres evidence that using.., Ceramic Stain, Toxicity 
Thursday 18th September 2025 
 
Thickly applied slips must fit the body and each other
 
Fit? It has to stick well. And stay stuck during drying (and shrinking). And the bond has to survive shrinkage that happens during firing. This potter is doing thick applications of each slip (actually that makes them engobes). She uses stains, that's wise, metal oxides bring baggage when used to color slips (e.g. their decomposition can affect the bond, they can gel the slurry, flux the fired product thereby increasing the firing shrinkage of the slip). Stains are better because they affect slurry and fired properties less. But there are still enough issues that each colored slip deserves testing. This potter first slaked B-mix as a slip (it is highly plastic), using it at a runny yogurt consistency. But it bubbled when fired hotter than a cool cone 6. A switch to porcelain slip (which is non-plastic) is shown here. It flaked off as it dried (even in a damp box for 24 hours), also after bisquing to cone 08, and sometimes even after firing to cone 6. This signalled a drying mismatch between body and slip, the bond that managed to survive drying was weakened enough to fail on firing. 
 
The solution was an engobe recipe that is super plastic and sticky. The popular Fish Sauce recipe is an example, it contains 10% bentonite and is unbelievably sticky. We formulated L3954B with this in mind. It adheres well to leather-hard clay and doesn't flake off (misfit is instead evident by surface cracking if its shrinks more than the body). And it is not highly vitreous, keeping its fired shrinkage low enough to match stoneware bodies. Mixing your own recipe also enables compensating the amount of feldspar if the stain affects the slip's degree of vitrification, and therefore fired shrinkage (e.g. blues, oranges, yellows).  
 
 
Context: L3954B, This pottery glaze is.. 
Monday 15th September 2025 
 
A giant cookie-cutter for slab built mugs
View and print it now using the Downloads page link
Available on the Downloads page 
 
3D print four of these and glue them together to make a large cookie cutter for producing slab-built mugs. 3D print the cup, fill it with plaster and remove the PLA using a heat gun. Roll out a thin slab of clay, press the cutter into it using a round wooden batt, make sure it is not sticking to the board and flip it over onto the plaster form. Handles can even be attached while it is on the form. If clay is plastic it can be used quite stiff. Experiment, adjust sizing and dimensions and reprint to fine-tune. 
 
This has been drawn "parametrically" with OnShape. I only had to draw half of one of the quarters (I mirrored that, extruded and then did a circular pattern of 4). The downloads page (link above) has a free link to view this drawing at OnShape.com. To 3D print, right-click the part (from the list on the lower left, "Quarter 1" and "Cup"). Choose the Export option and select 3MF as the file type (it should go to your downloads folder). Open it with your slicer and print (turn the quarter over and make four). You can even export in formats that other CAD software can open. Better yet, import it into your OnShape account to see the design history and change multiple aspects of the geometry in the variables panel (the drawing will adjust automatically). Other dimensions (e.g. cut depth) can be edited manually. Parametric design is revolutionary and it is now accessible even to hobbyists; it fits my try-it, adjust-it and try-it-again way of working.  
 
 
 
Context: Large cookie-cutter 3D-printed in.., 3D Design, Pie-Crust Mug-Making Method, Cookie Cutting clay with.. 
Monday 15th September 2025 
 
Recognize these universal oxidation glazes?
Almost every potter needs a Albany brown and rutile blue.
 
These are made by Barbara Childs Pottery (I saw them on sale in a tourist shop in Alaska). To keep costs down, I first assumed they use dipping glazes they mix themselves. Potter's Choice PC-32 Albany Slip Brown and PC-20 Rutile Blue hobby glazes emulate these long time pottery glaze recipes. However, a reader noted that Barabara Childs uses Clay Art Center’s Stellar Rust and Floating Blue (with guest appearances by Blue Green). But Amaco and Clay Art don't just use the traditional recipes; they adapt and improve them. Consider the rutile blue. Neither is using the traditional G2826R floating blue recipe, there are new and better ways using recipes like GA6-C and GR6-M. Likewise, with the brown, they are not using the traditional G2415E Albany Brown recipe. Rather, they improve it (e.g. like we did with G3933G1). High on their list of improvements would have been a way to reduce or remove the lithium to cut costs. Maybe you are a hobbyist and don’t feel you need to DIY your costs down. But do your customers feel the same way? Not buying just ten small jars of hobby brushing glaze will pay for a mixer and much of the ingredients to make gallons of each of these as dipping glazes. It will also set you on the road to gradually improving the glazes you use. And even reducing your prices. What about buying premixed powders? Yes, that is much less expensive. But if you are mixing the glaze from one manufacturer with the clay body from another, crazing is an ever-present issue. Mixing your own enables an adjustment to fix the problem. 
 
Context: Adding 6 lithium carbonate.., PC-2 floating blue with.. 
Tuesday 9th September 2025 
 
A draining issue with a slip cast bottle
It is turning inside out!
 
Why did this happen? There is a perfect storm of factors. Draining, during slip casting, creates suction and slip is heavy (1.8 times heavier than water). And this mold is tall with a narrow neck. So that creates a lot of suction. A slip having inadequate fluidity complicates draining. This round shape, even with printing artifacts, also releases well. How can this issue be avoided? 
 
-Draining the mold carefully, holding it near horizontal for much of the drain. 
-Use a well-deflocculated slip. 
-Add bentonite to the slip, perhaps 0.5%, to make it stickier and slow down release time (which also slows down the casting time). 
-At times, this will happen despite all efforts. In that case, if might be necessary to use a tube (e.g. 1/2 or 5/16”) to pump most of the liquid slip out of the bottle before inverting it. Adapt a 3D printed pour spout to keep the tube centered, at least near the mouth of the bottle. 
 
Context: Slip Casting, Beer Bottle Master Mold.., Casting Slip Problems 
Saturday 6th September 2025 
 
OnShape CAD is Free for Hobby Makers:
Is it as good as Fusion 360?
 
It is very hard to let Fusion 360 CAD go. But the approaching $750 renewal is powerful motivation! OnShape is amazing. There is nothing to install, it runs in a browser tab like Google docs (see picture below). Sure, it won’t run offline, but I am almost never offline. It functions very similar to Fusion 360 for my basic requirements of making molds for slip casting. Recent experience with the complexity and slowness of Solidworks for Makers, which is total overkill for what I need, really makes OnShape look good. 
 
My OnShape drawings are stored in my cloud account and are public. That sounded bad at first, but it also means that they are shareable with others (another person, whom I choose, can actually work on a drawing at the same time as me). The full OnShape is working in Firefox on my 2014 Mac Mini Ubuntu Linux machine. This is beyond exciting to me, traditional CAD has always required expensive hardware that is far beyond a hobbyist (of course, OnShape will also work in Safari on Mac and Chrome on Windows). A real bonus: I can edit drawings on iPad in what appears to be full power mode (although a mouse and keyboard are needed for serious work). 
 
Besides the above, here are some of the features and advantages I am seeing: 
-It opens and exports many professional CAD file types (a major drawback in SolidWorks for Makers). 
-It is really fast, login is quick and a drawing can be open in seconds, this is way better than xDesign for Makers (from Solidworks). 
-Documents are always saved, close one by simply clicking the home icon on the upper left. 
-The timeline (called the "Feature Tree") can be reordered, turned back and has folders like Fusion 360. 
-To 3D print just select part of your drawing, right-click and choose to export it in 3MF or STL format (it goes into the downloads folder). 
-All tools are in one long, monochrome ribbon of tiny icons at the top but there is a tool searcher. 
-Like Fusion 360, sketching constraints are inferred as sketches are created and applying them works in a similar fashion (but more aggressively). Their tiny symbols display in groups and associate to the point or line by a light grey line. Automatically applied constraints can make sketches behave in strange ways until you learn to find and remove the offending ones. 
-Constraints and dimensions are movable so drawings can be uncluttered for printing. 
-Section analysis is in the "Camera and Render Options" pop-up under the view cube. 
-The spline and bezier sketching tools are not as interactive (a downside of running in a browser). 
-It is not as good for making cookie cutters because it doesn’t do text nearly as well). 
-Parameters, called variables, are more in your face; they are even shown in the timeline. 
-Panning, rotating and the viewcube work a little differently. The iPad version of OnShape beats Fusion easily in this respect. 
-OnShape does not appear to support text along a path like Fusion. 
 
The secret weapon of learning OnShape: An AI chatbot. Just ask any question about how to do something. One helpful migration from Fusion 360 is to print the sketch(es) (with constraints and dimensions) and work from that to create the equivalent in OnShape. An advantage of OnShape is that if you get stuck (e.g. drawing goes red), you can share a link with a more knowledgeable friend to tell you what is wrong. Most often the issue is conflicting constrains. 
 
Context: 3D mechanical design software.., 3D Printed Pour-spout Forms.., My Breakup with Fusion.., OnShape parametric cloud-native CAD.. 
Saturday 6th September 2025 
 
Classic Medalta Potteries Beer Bottle
Make this mold using OnShape and Fusion 360
  | Contact Me
Use the contact form at the bottom on almost all the pages on this site or let's have a   together. 
Other ways to Support My Work
Subscribe to Insight-Live.com. It is about doing testing and development, not letting the information slip away. Starts at $15 for 6 months. 
Help Me on Social
 
 
Login to your online account 
Chemistry plus physics. 
Maintain your recipes, test results, firing schedules, pictures, materials, projects, etc. 
Access your data from any connected device. Import desktop Insight data (and of other products).
 Group accounts for industry and education. Private accounts for potters. 
Get started. 
 
Download for Mac, PC, Linux 
Interactive glaze chemistry for the desktop. Free (no longer in development but still maintained, M1 Mac version now available). 
Download here or in the Files panel within your Insight-live.com account. 
 What people have said about Digitalfire- I cannot express how refreshing it is to no longer be dependent on textbook recipes.
 - Firstly, I want to thank you about this very good site in the net which helps very much in the development of the ceramics industry.
 - Again, thanks for building a website that has been very influential in how I look at ceramics in general, and that has been such a valuable resource to my work as a student, production potter, and chemist.
 - Your materials database has been the best source of information for me for a long time. Even most of the European frits are in there and this is not true for many books.
 - What a lovely surprise to find you online. As I've changed to Broadband you were allowed through and I'm really pleased. I'm quite sure your site will be a source of much inspiration.
 - I am having a BLAST learning about glaze chemistry from *The Magic of Fire*  (I recommend this book highly).
 - I have joined to millions of others who must absolutely love you and are so thankful to you - I just want you to really know that you have opened up a whole new world to me that I thought was insurmountable - The wealth of information on Digital Fire is most appreciated, and I hope you know that what you have done is really enormous and God sent to potters.  
 - Thank you so much. This is what a good business looks like; great product, immediate response from the owner no less, and over the top service.
 - This is a excellent site for Ceramic colors and containing very good knowledge for Ceramic coloring agents. Thank to Digitalfire Ceramic Oxides Directory.
 - Actually my brother asked to download the books. He is running a ceramic company in India. He has learned so many things in your free download, later he is impressed on your simple and clear explanation of ceramic technology.
 
 What people have said about Insight-Live- Thank you for your very informative website - it is a real help to one who has spent 40 years potting.
 - I just wanted to say, thank you! I’m relatively new to pottery, taking a mostly self-taught approach and I’m at the stage where glazing is in my mind. I don’t want to be (and can’t see myself ever) buying glazes from commercial suppliers. I want to learn my craft with glaze as much as I do with my clay preparation and pottery making. I’ve seen “the dragon” and been uninspired by so much of what I find online and to be honest, in many glaze books. It seems more popular to try and present a mass of glaze possibilities than to offer a learning experience beyond being told a glaze needs a melter, a refractory and a glass-maker.  Enough to offer a very basic understanding, but nothing upon which to build the understanding that will allow some degree of mastery (or at least influence) of your glaze making. 
I am so pleased to have found digitalfire.com. You’ve shown me exactly how to approach and understand glazing, giving me the foundation for approach I sought. I was thinking of base glazes and what you’ve shown me about working on from those is fantastic and exactly what I was looking for. To have a reliable base glaze to modify and develop to meet different needs; to understand how to shift a melting point or adjust the surface gloss; to come to know how the mechanisms in a glaze and understanding them gives me the route to creating glazes that realize my intentions - wow!
I can’t thank you enough. Rather than having to form a dumb reliance on a book of recipe cards and a bunch of website bookmarks (which I wasn’t wanting to go for) you’ve given me the foundation for a lifelong development and understanding of the glazes I will make, that will become “my” glazes. You have really opened my mind to the whole subject and it doesn’t seem to be a problem that I’m no scientist or chemist. You’ve shared your knowledge in a way that is completely approachable and remarkably easy to understand for someone without any kind of science/chemistry background.
 - After more than 50 years making pots, selling and teaching I’m done. Worn to a frazzle. Just wanted to let you know that over the years I’ve relied on you for information on materials and glazes. I’ve never been disappointed, and I owe you a big thanks. I’m over 80 and I need to slow down. I’ll continue making pottery, but not so much. I’ve been at it since 1968 (phew!). I thank you for your advice and especially for your website and its cascading information. Always useful, always on target. I’m only sad that I was not able to meet you in person. Peace, love and happiness.
 - Insight live is great...!
 - I have found your website to be extremely helpful because of your analysis of glaze chemistry and other information too. I have been able to mix all my own glazes and troubleshoot with the information you provide. I want you to know how much you're helping fellow potters all over the country and I truly appreciate your generosity in sharing the information.
 - I just want to thank you for this most interesting and informative article. I just did a general search for the compatibility of a stoneware glaze on porcelain, and your page came up! Wow! what a mine of information and just what I needed as I was also looking for a slip recipe for my students.
 - I'll feel sorry for the world when you're no longer around to produce such content. 
 - I’ve told you before but it never hurts to say it again, this is great stuff and I get so much info from your posts. Extremely valuable! Thanks so very much for all you do. 
 - I have been receiving your excellent emails for some time and frequent your site for good data. I wanted to thank you for all your work. It has proven helpful as a ceramics instructor at both the college level and the art center level.
 - Had quite quite a few problems learning to enter recipes.
 
  |