Specific Types of Cracks
Shivering
Sometimes a piece of glaze will
crack off, normally near a rim or at edges. Some clay may be attached to
the glaze piece that cracks off. This occurs because stress has built up
between the clay and glaze that can't be absorbed. It is often caused by
over-sponging which takes away the fine clay particles and leaves behind
the groggier clay particles which are not elastic enough to absorb the
stress.
Crazing
A network of very fine cracks
in the glaze is called crazing. It is caused by a mis-match between the
clay and glaze. It often will not show up until the pot is cooled, or
sometimes even until it has been heated and cooled a few times. Some
people believe slow cooling will prevent crazing, but the stresses still
exist and eventually the crazing would occur.
Dunting
Dunting is a special type of
crack which occurs from stresses caused during firing and cooling. These
stresses primarily occur during two critical points of firing called
silica inversions which occur at 1063 degrees F (573 degrees C), and 439
degrees F (226 degrees C). At these inversion points, the structure of
the silica molecules rearranges. It is important to fire slowly through
these two temperatures, and electronic kiln profiles often do this for
you automatically while they are heating.
Most dunting however is caused
in cooling. These cracks appear as long, clean, body cracks with sharp
edges. If the ware is glazed, the glaze edges are sharp. They may be
vertical, horizontal, or spiral.
There are 3 main reasons why
cooling dunts occur.
The first occurs as you cool
through the first silica inversion at 1063 degrees F. At this inversion
the body contracts suddenly. The more silica (quartz) in the body, the
more contraction. Since different parts of the pot reach this
temperature at different times, it doesn't all contract together, and
that causes stresses which can crack. Take for example a tall pot. The
top will cool much faster than the bottom, because the bottom has the
whole temperature of the kiln shelf keeping it warm. So the top will
cool faster than the bottom, causing a crack around the bottom wall.
The second occurs as you cool
through the 439 degree F inversion. A similar thing happens as above.
However, potters sometimes like to open their kilns at about this
temperature to see their pots, and they can make this much worse.
The third type of cooling dunt
occurs months or even years after firing. For example, a pot might split
right in half after 3 months. This is likely the result of thermal
shock. In this case the clay and glaze expand at different rates when
exposed to temperature variation, and this change causes the object to
crack. To be more specific, the body has contracts more than the glaze.
If the glaze is weaker it will shiver (see above). If the clay is weaker
the object will crack.
S Cracks
One of the most common cracks
found in pots is the "s" crack, which occurs at the bottom of
a pot, in the shape of an s, usually on thrown pieces. I have heard so
many theories about this and how to prevent it, that I am not even
getting into it now. Perhaps later I will do a whole tip on the
different theories so you can decide for yourself! The one thing
everyone agrees on is that you should keep the bottom of the pot as dry
as possible while throwing, and compress the bottom during throwing and
trimming.
To troubleshoot a Crack
If you have a crack, find the
point where it is largest (widest). This will be the point where the
crack started, and can help you understand what happened. Cracks in the
rim usually were caused by stresses in the raw stage. Cracks in the base
usually occur in the firing.
Another way to determine the
cause of a crack is to look at the surrounding glaze. If the glaze at
the end of the crack is sharp, it cracked in the later stages of firing,
probably during cooling. If the glaze is round at the edge of the crack,
the crack probably occurred early in firing and the glaze had time to
heal over.
Summary
This just touches on some of
the reasons ware can crack. But obviously most clay is pretty tolerant,
or you would get a lot more cracks and it would be very annoying!
Remember that most cracks occur from stresses that occur during drying,
even if they don't show up until later. But some cracks occur because of
firing and cooling, so it is usually best to fire and cool slowly.
Copyright 2001 Cindi Anderson http://www.bigceramicstore.com
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