CLAY DEFINITIONS
- CLAY: Mud; moist, sticky dirt. In ceramics, clay is fine-grained, firm earthy material that is plastic when wet, brittle when dry, and very hard when heated.
- The most common types of ceramic clays are: earthenware, stoneware, terra cotta
- EARTHENWARE: Earthenware is a low-fire clay that is porous and not waterproof.
- STONEWARE: Clay used for pottery on the wheel
- TERRA COTTA: Clay typically used for hand building pottery
- WEDGING: A technique to make clay plastic and remove air pockets. The clay is thoroughly kneaded and cut before use in modeling or pottery.
- DRYING STAGES:
- PLASTIC: Clay is plastic when it can be easily manipulated - modeled, molded or pressed into a desired shape; malleable.
- LEATHER HARD: In ceramics, leather hard is a state in which clay has lost moisture to evaporation, but has not yet completely hardened. The clay is damp enough to be joined to other pieces with scoring and slip.
- BONE DRY: In ceramics, greenware which is thoroughly room dried is said to be bone dry.
- CLAY BUILDING TECHNIQUES:
- PINCH POT - Pinching is a fundamental pottery technique. Making a pinch-pot is pressing the thumb into a ball of clay, and drawing the clay out into a pot by repeatedly squeezing the clay between the thumb and fingers.
- COIL - Long, snakelike ropes of clay that are used in making pottery. The coil method of making pottery involves building the walls of a pot with a series of coils into the required shape.
- SLAB BUILT - Clay slabs are cut to shape and joined together using scoring and wet clay called slip. Scoring and applying slip to such roughened surfaces creates a bond that holds the pieces together.
- RELIEF - A type of sculpture in which form projects from a background.
- GREENWARE: Greenware generally refers to unfired pottery.
- BISQUE: Bisque clay has been fired once but has not been glazed.
- KILN: A kiln is a special oven or furnace that can reach very high temperatures and is used to bake, or fire clay.
- FIRING:Firing is the process of baking and hardening pottery. The high temperature fuses the clay particles together, hardening the clay. Temperatures in kilns can reach 2500 degrees.
- SCORING:Making scratches in pieces of clay to be joined together is called scoring.
- CLAY SLIP:Slip is made by mixing clay with water. Slip is a fine, liquid form of clay used with scoring to cement together parts that have been formed separately.
- GLAZE: Glaze is a thin coating of minerals which produces a glassy transparent or colored coating on bisque ware. Glaze is fixed by firing the bisque ware in a kiln.
- KNEADING: Working the clay on a surface with the palms of the hands to get out the air bubbles
- BURNISHING: Rubbing dampened, leather hard clay to make it smooth
- EMBOSS: Raised surface decoration on pottery
- STAMP: A repeat decoration on pottery
- SGRAFFITO: Scratching into colored engobe to create a decorative look
- ENGOBE: Colored slip used for decorating leatherhard clay; it works well with sgraffito