This looks amazing for fun projects, thank you for sharing the recipe and results! I was wondering, is this glaze opaque white, or is it translucent? from the video I can see that it is opaque but I'm not really sure. It could be fun to mix it with other pigments to do some decorative paint!
What fun and informative video. I happen to have a couple pounds of 3195 in my inventory, and now I'm intrigued. I'm wondering if it would work as a decorative over-glaze?
My local art glass blower creates GITD and uranium glass. And as far as I know, the temperatures required to blow glass exceed cone 8. He makes 3 different colors of GITD glass, acid green, turquoise, and blue. So I'd reach out to Fremont Antique Glass in Seattle to see how he creates his glass. He might be able to point you to a supplier.
We certainly do teach about the chemistry of low temperature. The real trick is that low temp chem is a derivation of high temp. So you have to first understand high temp to master low temp. We take you through the entire process. -Matt
This looks amazing for fun projects, thank you for sharing the recipe and results! I was wondering, is this glaze opaque white, or is it translucent? from the video I can see that it is opaque but I'm not really sure. It could be fun to mix it with other pigments to do some decorative paint!
Gracias por tanta generosidad en compartir esta receta, excelente explicación! 💫🌟🙌
This is really interesting. Do you think it would be possible to do a cone 6 firing with cone 6 glaze and then do a third firing with the glow glaze?
I was also wondering this, if it could be used in the same way as a lustre firing?
had the same thought~ an onglaze glaze~ .. but necessarily On glaze .. just on ∆6 fired ware~😂
had the same thought, I think we should try it
The biggest issue is going to get an application method that sticks to a vitrified glaze
@@matthewkatz7320try spraying cheap hair spray on first
Fun! Thanks, Rose!
What fun and informative video. I happen to have a couple pounds of 3195 in my inventory, and now I'm intrigued. I'm wondering if it would work as a decorative over-glaze?
Very cool!
I wonder if it can be used like a luster atop already (mid to high) fired pieces.
Where can I buy glow-in-the-dark powder?
My local art glass blower creates GITD and uranium glass. And as far as I know, the temperatures required to blow glass exceed cone 8. He makes 3 different colors of GITD glass, acid green, turquoise, and blue. So I'd reach out to Fremont Antique Glass in Seattle to see how he creates his glass. He might be able to point you to a supplier.
Does CMW help the low fire curious to formulate or are the classes geared toward mid fire?
We certainly do teach about the chemistry of low temperature. The real trick is that low temp chem is a derivation of high temp. So you have to first understand high temp to master low temp. We take you through the entire process.
-Matt
Is the micron size of the powder important?
I see you using a Talisman sieve :D
Europium doped strontium aluminate… there’s a certain joke from the show Brooklyn 99 I really want to use, but you can look it up yourself.