I have been experimenting with using powdered glass (designed for use with hot glass) in the kiln. I found out that it is very unpredictable as it is so this and fine, so it melts and separates, giving different lacy textures and little strings and holes.
I took this further by also using glass stringers, glass frit, copper wire and copper sheet. I really like the surprise of opening the kiln and seeing what the powders have done.
Showing posts with label powder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label powder. Show all posts
Sunday, 12 April 2015
Metalwork: Enamelling on copper
I decided to try using my hot shop colour powders on copper, as I know that copper and glasma have very similar coefficients of expansion, and so can be used together. The problem I was most worried about was it not sticking to the copper. to combat this I thoroughly cleaned the copper so there were no contaminants on the surface. I was right to worry, as my first attempt was unsuccessful, the enamel flaking off the surface soon after it cooled. I thought this was due to the copper building up a layer of oxide, and the powder stuck to that instead of the copper itself. I then thought that to combat this I could use borax flux to stop the oxide building up (flux is what keeps the metal clean and enables solder to stick to it). I first mixed the powder with water and flux and painted it on to the copper.
I heated up the piece from underneath (to heat the copper rather than the enamel) and the flux bubbled up. I liked the effect this gave, as it moved the powder out of a flat layer and into a very interesting texture.I then used enamels that are designed for use in a kiln on sheet glass, which have a lower melting temperature. I textured the copper in the rolling mill then painted on the enamel and heated it with a blowtorch from underneath.
These stuck without flux, and stayed where I painted them on, so were a lot more controllable, but not as textured as the powder pieces.
Labels:
copper,
enamel,
enamelling,
flux,
glass,
metalwork,
powder,
powdered glass
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