Types Of Clay For Pottery

types of clay for pottery
Pottery and Clay?

I'm looking to achieve a lifetime ambition of making a quirky pots, plates, ornaments, vases, jugs, ashtrays and all sorts of strange and wonderful NAK nik - all in clay. I do not have much money to throw at this he will start as a hobby, and I hope that if she earns enough momentum that I can sell things on ebay or locally and may be quite money for a furnace. My question is how do I start and What''s the best type of clay to use and without an oven, but using oven or outdoor barbecue gas grill (Who can heat up to 800degrees - do not know if this is Celsius or Fahrenheit)?

If you are interested in using polymer clays, you only need a regular oven at low temperature - Four regular or toaster (at approx. 265-275 F for 15-45 minutes). (Polymer clay can be cured in more unusual ways too ... A furnace would burn it good powder, and is never used.) Very great things can be done with polymer clay, but they are not generally thicker Only 1 1 / 4 "unless an armature or below they are made" hollow ". All the things you mentioned could be made from clay polymer, but the plates could not be consumed outside the line (could put the clay on the back side of a glass plate well). Polymer Clay is certainly good for all sorts of "weird and wonderful trinkets" and is often used for such things. It can also be used to equisitely things that are elegant, simple and cute, or simply no way at all ... depends entirely on the machine. If you want to know on Baking Polymer Clay, or almost everything else to shape polymer, see my online encyclopedia for the polymer clay course loads, info, examples, etc.. This is the table of contents: http://glassattic.com/polymer/contents.htm (... to navigate, just scroll all the way ... When you find a page you want to search, click on its name within the alphabetical navigation bar on the left side of the page to access it) Here's a direct link to the page just cooking: http://glassattic.com/polymer/baking.htm (common brand names PS polymer clay "Are Premo, FimoClassic, Kato Polyclay, Cernit, FimoSoft, and Sculpey III, etc.) HTH, Diane B.

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