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For more than twenty years,
I have been using overglazes as a direct painting technique. My canvas
usually is a fired, flux and white base coated enameled copper piece.
Although I sometimes make a rough sketch for placement, I more often paint
directly in an impressionistic style. Each painting is a new and different
delight. Even after all these years, the firing process is still able
to produce a surprise often enough to hold my interest when I watch the
enamel change color as it cools. When the result is not acceptable or
what I intended, I enjoy working my way out of a color or design error.
I make wall pieces, plates, bowls, mezuzahs, and switch plates. The switch
plates and the mezuzahs are small enamels that I use to experiment with
new color combinations or a new design. In my studio, my work has ranged
from 11/4" cloisonn? jewelry to sectional pieces comprised of 12
" square segments. I use ceramic overglazes and china paints (on
glaze enamels) and also mix them together to make additional colors. My
overglazes are old ones, probably leaded, from Thompson Enamel and Standard
Ceramic Supply Co. The china paints are from various china supply houses.
Most china painters and enamelists mix the material with oils, but I use
water to prepare the overglazes for painting.
In the early 1970s, I produced a series of enamels made with fine line
black pen drawings and overglaze colors added with small brushes. While
traveling in Canada I visited an enamel studio that had been marketing
a line with the same technique. They, too, were painting flowers with
the fine line black first. Shortly after that visit, I thought of using
watercolor brushes first to paint the flowers and then adding the black
pen line. The only overglazes I had were the limited colors that Thompson
Enamel then carried. I stopped using this technique because I did not
like the yellows and oranges when fired at 1500 F, and I thought the Thompson
palette was inadequate. About a year later, while exhibiting at the American
Craft Council Northeast Fair, I was browsing through the catalog of Standard
Ceramic Supply Corp. and spotted columns of ceramic overglazes with enticing
names from cream to dark purple. They fired at just under 1500 F, which
was what I wanted. The sales representative told me they would not work
on enamels and I would be wasting my money. I decided to try them anyway,
despite his protests, and bought about 12 colors: yellows, oranges, pinks,
purples and a deep blue. Most of them worked, and I am still using the
Standard Ceramic Supply product. The ones I list below are my favorites.
It was not until the late 1980s that I added the china paints.
If you want to add overglazes to your supply of enamels, buy the smallest
quantity of about 8 10 colors to start, or a sample kit if it is available.
A teaspoon amount lasts a long time. The china paints come in a glass
vial. The violets and pinks are the most expensive. I am assuming that
you know how to paint in some other medium. If not, you can use them to
add an accent of color or shading to an area of fired enamel on your piece
made with one of the beginner's techniques.
The Standard Ceramic overglaze colors I use most arc: Lemon ST114, Pink
236, Green 112 P, Canary 650/291, Dark Violet 324 and Orange 286. I use
the Thompson 900 series, except the yellow and orange. Originally, I made
color samples on 3 " x 8 " 20 ga copper that had a medium firing
white base coat and black crackle on the back. My enamels are mostly 80
mesh leaded ones from Thompson that I purchased in quantity years ago.
For the base coats I usually use Thompson's leaded 80 mesh #1005 medium
flux, #1000 medium white, counter enamel, #124A hard black, #772 liquid
form enamel and #426 soft flux over my name on the back.
I primarily use the #169 Norman kiln on a 220V line. The inside chamber
is 16" x 16 " x 9 ". The door opens horizontally from the
right side. The pyrometer is set in the right rear corner. It has two
variable control switches although I would prefer one switch. It was re
bricked and rewired about 15 years ago. I have a reserve set of wires.
To prepare the overglazes for painting, I put about 1/2 teaspoon of each
color in the bottom part of a 3 " plastic Petri dish near one side.
The cover is labeled. I add water gradually with a syringe as I blend
the overglaze to a painting consistency with a small bent painter's palette
knife. My favorite knife has a 1/2 " wide straight edge because I
accidentally broke off the tip years ago. I use tap water. When I paint,
I tilt the uncovered Petri dish slightly so the overglaze is at the top
of the dish and a little water at the bottom of the dish.
I work in a modified production style for the base coats on purchased
18 ga copper forms. If I am making 6 " to 8 " plates, I usually
prepare about 12 pieces at a time for the paintings, which then arc painted
in a number of sessions. If the base coat is to be a white or light opaque,
I clean the copper pieces with Penny Brite. If the base coat is to be
a transparent, I clean the copper on the polishing wheel with a goblet
buff that has been charged with Lea Compound C. When clean, each piece
is placed back side up on a 2 " bottle to be coated with black crackle,
as shown on page 45. I brush on the crackle, let it dry and then sgraffito
my name in the center with a sharpened chopstick. The loosened dry crackle
is tapped off, and any dry crackle on the edge of the piece is removed
with an edge of the square handle of the chopstick. The pieces arc placed
face side down on a tray and transferred to the enamel worktable. I heat
the kiln to 1500 F, and keep it there while I apply the enamel to two
plate fronts. Before applying the enamel, I set up the kiln furniture
to receive two pieces for firing. On each of two 6 " square nichrome
mesh planches I place a 3 pointed stilt for firing the piece with the
front side up. While a piece fires, I apply the enamel on the next one,
keeping a production line moving. This part is just work. By firing a
number of pieces, one after the other, the firing hardware stays hot and
prevents a big drop in the kiln temperature when the kiln door is opened.
For My usual white base coat on the front, I mix about 2 pounds of Thompson's
leaded 80 mesh, #1000 white and I pound of their #1005 medium fusing flux
in a 5 pound jar. I like the softer look with a little of the flux showing
through instead of a bathtub white porcelain look. To sift enamel on a
piece, I use the 60 mesh, 2 " old fashion metal tea strainers that
have sloping straight sides with the mesh flat across the bottom. Some
of my sifters are labeled flux, white or counter. I only use them for
what they are marked so I do not have to think about cleaning them. (See
section on siffing base coats.) On the front, I sift a heavy coat of the
flux/white mixture and a second light coat of white. The piece is sprayed
with water before and after each sifting. With a light spraying of water,
just enough to hold the enamel, I do not have to wait for the piece to
dry. The first piece is placed on the set up stilt, put in the kiln and
fired to maturity to ensure that the black crackle on the back is shiny
and fired enough to adhere. While that piece fires, the next flux and
white layers are sifted on the front of the next piece. The next piece
is set on the other firing set up, the first piece is removed from the
kiln, and the next piece is put in the kiln. The program continues until
all the pieces have a fired base coat on the front and on the back. This
is the base coat method of firing both enameled sides in the first firing
that I learned from Doris Hall in 1955.
My counter enamel, with the 60 mesh sifter, for the second coat on the
back is 2/3 left over 80 mesh enamels and 1/3 Thompson's 80 mesh, leaded,
124A hard black. By having the hard black in the mixture, I do not have
to re enamel the back again. Soft flux, Thompson's #426, is sifted over
my name. I sift 2 coats of counter on the back except over my name. As
usual, a light spray of water is applied before and after each sifting.
The same production line system is used, but with hammocks to support
the plates with the back side up in the kiln. Each piece is fired to maturity.
When removed from the kiln, the plate is transferred to a steel plate,
back side up and weighted with an old iron until it cools. After all the
pieces arc fired, and loose
firescale on the edges removed, the plates are ready to be painted.
Each piece takes about seven firings.
I have a separate table for painting. The Petri dishes, with the covers
on them, are set up as a color palette. Any overglazes that have dried
out have a few drops of water added and arc blended smooth to prepare
for painting. Two bottles containing water are also on the table, one
for cleaning the brushes and the other for clean water ' along with a
folded paper towel for wiping a brush and the syringe and water spray
bottle. I use sable or kolinsky watercolor brushes. As with any painting
medium, you need to practice the brush strokes and develop your own style
and preferences for colors. For painting leaves, I use Lebenzon's custom
made, kolinsky, broad, long pointed watercolor brush in the Chinese painting
method. The brush is held vertically, pressing down on the heel of the
brush for a broad stroke and gradually, as the brush is moved forward,
pulled up off the paper for a pointed tip to the leaf. You need to remember
that most china paints have lead in them and some have cadmium so do not
put the brush in your mouth.
The overglazes handle like watercolor paints in that one wet color placed
on another one will blend or bleed; but unlike painting on paper, the
enameled surface does not absorb the overglaze. If part of the painting
dries before you are ready to fire the piece, then the whole piece will
need to be sprayed lightly with water. If the painting dries in sections,
a line often appears between these sections when the piece is fired. The
overglaze painting is dry by the time it is placed on the warm firing
set up and put in the kiln. Plates and bowls arc placed in the kiln on
a three pointed stilt on the planche; plaques are fired within a hammock.
I fire with my kiln at about 1500 F. It is years since I tested the pyrometer
reading. I really judge the heat by the color in the kiln and fire for
time by instinct and a quick peek. Overfired overglazes will lose the
intensity of their colors.
For my floral painting, I often start by painting various shades of green
leaves with the kolinsky watercolor brush. Next come my imaginary flowers.
The first flower is often the predominating color from which the painting
develops. If I do not like a part of the painting that has dried, I remove
it with a small, stiff, stencil brush. If the whole composition is not
to my liking, the piece is rinsed off under running water. When the painting
is at the point that it cannot be developed further, it is fired to just
before maturity. Then if there are areas, say on the fired green leaves,
where I want to add another flower, I either sift leaded, 80 mesh, #644,
soft white in a shape and size or I wet pack an opaque over a leaf. To
add color to this unfired white flower, I charge a brush with color and
run the tip around the outline of the shape I want. A color can also be
added within the added shape. The wetter the overglaze and the enamel,
the more the overglaze color will bleed into the opaque white enamel.
Instead of using the stiff stencil brush to remove part of the painting,
you can use a wet clean brush.
Instead of mixing a color on your palette you can blend colors on the
painted section when it is wet by charging the brush with thin overglaze
and letting it run either where you direct it or by tilting the piece.
Most of the overglazes arc transparent, but adding the white will tighten
the color and also lose most of the transparency. As you work with the
overglazes you learn which ones need to be applied thicker, like the reds
that burn out faster than other colors.
When I consider the painting completed, I often delineate some of the
shapes by drawing with Hunt's #101 nib in a pen holder (you can also use
a ruling pen) and Thompson's fine line black, which I purchase in liquid
form. (Some enamelists use it to sign their name on the front of their
work ) I call it "Ink". I order it in the I ounce bottle because
it takes a lot of stirring to put the glob at the bottom into solution.
I use a dental spatula to stir the ink well, and separate it into four
little glass bottles with screw on lids. Before using the ink, it needs
to be stirred well again. I first test if it flows from the nib like ink
and test if I can draw some lines on smooth paper. I hold the pen almost
straight up when I write with it. If the ink is too thick, add artist
turpentine one drop at a time and stir after each drop. You will need
to stir the solution about every ten minutes as you use it and also dip
the pen in turpentine from time to time for the ink sometimes dries on
the nib tip. After you dip the pen in turp you need to re dip the nib
into the fine line black a few times before you draw with it or the ink
will be too thin. If you get an unwanted blob, wait until it dries and
then remove it or part of it with a pointed chopstick. When the pen drawing
is complete and dry, the fine line black is corrected with the chopstick.
Then fire just until the drawing is smooth. You can test it, out of the
kiln, with the edge of the potter's spatula. The wide areas will have
break lines in them. I like that. If you overfire, the drawn line becomes
thinner arid, of course, the overglaze colors are changed. I finish each
piece with a sifted overall veil of 80 mesh soft flux.
The final step is to smooth the exposed metal edge. My sanding and polishing
wheels arc connected to a dust collector purchased and installed by a
local dental supply company. Even so, I don a nose mask, a facemask, leather
gloves, and a shower cap over my hair before using the equipment.
The face edge of the piece is finished first at the belt sander with
a 6 " x 48 " fine grit emery cloth belt. After grinding the
front and back edge of each piece, I remove the grinding marks. I tear
a sheet of fine emery cloth into 1 " x 12 " strips and wrap
one strip around one end of a I" wide wood stick. Wearing leather
gloves, I rub with the strip of emery cloth across the grinding marks
to obliterate them. As the beginning wrap of the emery cloth strip wears
out, I wind it a little to have a clean area to work with. The final finish
is a rubbing of the metal with a wad of 00 steel wool. I place felt tabs
on the back of the piece over the three stilt marks and then add my label.
Each piece is placed in a plastic bag to keep it clean.
Another use I have found for the overglazes is to make pale opaque enamel
colors when I need to match a client's color swatch. For a small amount
of enamel, about an ounce of 80 mesh, maybe white, is put into a 4 ounce
glass jar with about 2 ounces of water and 1/4 teaspoon of overglaze color
in painting consistency This mixture is then well stirred and allowed
to sit for about 15 minutes and stirred again. If you want it darker,
gradually add more overglaze, stir and let it settle in. Pour off the
excess water. Place the open jar with a loose piece of paper on top of
it on top of the kiln to dry out. When the enamel is dry, you can wet
pack or sift as you wish. If I am aiming for a specific match to a swatch,
I often have to make a few different batches and fire samples on scrap
copper.
If you like to paint, you will find the nuances of color that can be
obtained with overglazes are limitless. The tactile quality of enamels
as well as the sense of their enduring quality will bring you delight.
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