Ceramic
Andy Martin's ceramic tile blog.
Thursday, 12 June 2014
Wednesday, 28 May 2014
new tiles
These two tiles were made in terracotta with the wave pattern as I described in my last post, fired in a bisque fire and then painted with green and blue glazes. This was then rubbed off, revealing the wavy pattern of terracotta ridges. The tiles were then coated again with clear glaze and fired once more. This takes a long time but it can't be rushed. My son Bevis tells me that the tile should be set to dry on a piece of plasterboard that uniformly draws the wet from the tile and prevents it from warping.
Croissant Box Pattern
We bought a box of croissants one day and I was smitten by the pattern of the cardboard container - it was too good for recycling. When I took it in to my class, Paul suggested that I should paint the cardboard with shellac, build a clay surround, and pour in a portion of plaster to make a more permanent stamp than the cardboard original. When I had stamped out the tile, I painted on white glaze into the grooves. I then rubbed off the raised surface with a clean cloth before painting on the black glaze.
I saw in the British Museum an Assyrian wall relief with rivers flowing in just such a way as this pattern and thought I might go on to make a river box with the plaster stamp - clay fish and clay snails could be added before it was fired.
I saw in the British Museum an Assyrian wall relief with rivers flowing in just such a way as this pattern and thought I might go on to make a river box with the plaster stamp - clay fish and clay snails could be added before it was fired.
Tuesday, 27 May 2014
Bay Tree Leaf
One day I saw a bay leaf with the sunshine coming through it and thought that I should take a photo to use in some way. That was ten years ago and making a tile now with a section of the pattern drawn on it would be a suitable homage to the now long gone Bay Tree.
Ploughed fields
These tiles were inspired by the patterns of ploughed fields in North
Essex where I lived in 1960. Both were made out of buff clay left to
dry a little, with terracotta slip applied on top then scraped away
using the sgraffito method.
Bevis's Zodiac tile
'Bevis, the story of a boy' is a book written by Richard Jefferies in 1882. In Chapter 35, 'Bevis's Zodiac', Jefferies describes how Bevis looked at the clear sky one night when he was camping on an island and saw these stars. " The stars shone brighter than it is usually thought they do when there is no moon; but in fact it is not so much the moon as the state of the atmosphere. There was no haze in the dry air, and he could see the Pole Star distinctly" I was always inspired by Richard Jefferies writing and it was because of this that we named our son Bevis, for whom the tile was made.
The Shooting Star
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