Gary Jackson: Fire When Ready Pottery
A Chicago potter’s somewhat slanted view of clay & play
Categories: kiln firing

After a full day of cooling, it was finally time to crack open the top of the kiln to cool it completely to unload later that night… and to get a first sneak peek into the kiln!!!

Categories: kiln firing

After a LONG day of firing… when the last cone finally falls over, the kiln is at its top temperature right around 2,350-degrees!!! It’s been a very loud day with the flames, burners, air, fans, etc.!!! So when the kiln is finally done, it’s a weird feeling to turn the kiln off & have sudden silence! Hope it all went well & that everything looks good inside?! Just a silent glowing box of bricks as you leave for the night… with fingers crossed.

Categories: kiln firing

By the end of the firing, when the kiln is almost to its top temperatures, the last of the pyrometric cones are dropping fast. I start to insert the soda-mixture when cone 8 goes down & cone 9 is soft. When the mixture of soda ash & soda bicarbonate is added into the kiln, the flames go WILD as the mixture burns & the moisture evaporates instantly! Causing crazy-cool flames to come shooting out EVERYWHERE!!! Not for the weak of heart… or those afraid of flames.

I think most potters are pyromaniacs somewhere down deep! HA!!!

Categories: kiln firing

After a couple hours of the kiln firing & warming everything up, the temperature starts to build rapidly. At a certain point in the firing, you put the kiln into body reduction. Forcing the balance of the “air-to-gas” ratio out of whack. Not enough air for a stable flame. So the flames seek out extra oxygen wherever it can find it. Pulling the air from the porous pots… and reaching out through any cracks in the bricked-up kiln door! Very exciting!

Categories: kiln firing, production

After a couple hours of “Pottery-Tetris” last Friday night… the back stack was loaded, and then the front two-thirds loaded. It filled up pretty quick & might be a little tighter than I would like it to be?! But confident that I’ll be able to “push” the soda deep into the kiln during the firing. All stacked & ready to brick-up the door! And then home for the night…

Categories: glaze, kiln firing, process, production

So last Friday night, I rolled my studio cart down to the kiln room… via the jenky freight elevator… yikes! Everything arrived safely and I was all glazed & wadded… ready to start loading the soda kiln. The challenge is always to “squeeze in” as many pots a possible… while still leaving enough open spaces for proper air-flow through the kiln so the soda atmosphere can make its way though to hit all of the pieces! Here we go…. giddy-up!

Categories: kiln firing, textures

After hundreds of firings, the soda kiln at Lillstreet is showing some wear & tear… and will be replaced at some point. But until then, I do LOVE all of the crusty colors & patinas that have taken over the bricks. Such great textures to appreciate… purely from the build-up from the soda-firing atmospheric firings! Very cool.

Categories: kiln firing

Last Friday I was “greeted” with this… and empty kiln full of possibility! And yes, another soda firing weekend for me! I’ve been a little busy lately, so I apologize for the delay… but we can re-create my soda firing weekend now… a few days later!

Categories: art fair, artists, collaborations, flower pots, stamped, terra cotta

Well, it looks like the collaboration project is finally “collaborating” together! Yep… this year it’s terra cotta flowerpots for the WIN!!! I made all of the flowerpots & water saucers with my stamping, and now Cory is adding her own special sort of handbuilt whimsy! Love her creativity… even more when you see them come together in COLOR!!! More photos to come… as the “Big Reveal” will happen at ART IN THE GARDEN this weekend in Glenview!

Categories: art fair, artists, collaborations, porcelain, sgraffito

And speaking of “laboring” on Labor Day… now that metalsmith Amy Taylor has finished her part of our collaboration with all of her sgraffito doodles on my porcelain pieces, I can now get them into a glaze kiln quickly so they’re done & out in time for next weekend’s ART IN THE GARDEN! This one of the best features of ART IN THE GARDEN… several of the artists work together on different one-of-a-kind collaborations that will only be available next weekend in Glenview. And they’re all limited editions, so you might need to get there early!!!