This morning I found a pumpkin I’d forgotten about on the
porch. I popped it in the oven to roast on its way to becoming pie. That
pumpkin was a hold-out. I know it is time to put away all things autumnal and
to get with the holiday program. Last week dozens of ornaments (expect-able
items such as snowflakes and gingermen, but also no few starfish, bears, and
hearts) went off to a ministry in Pennsylvania. This week’s challenge is Santa
hats. A man called wanting Santa hats, which was my excuse to get a nice copper
cookie cutter. He sent his list and I decided I’d make one as well. I think by
the time I complete all the Santa hats, I may be more than ready to move
on. On the other hand, ornaments are a
lot more fun since I realized that the backs don’t have to be plain.
To prevent pottery from sticking to the kiln shelf, the
bottom of each piece remains unglazed. The glaze is a layer of glass that forms
as the glaze melts and matures at high temperatures. We brush “kiln wash” on
the kiln shelves in case a few molten drops hit the deck during the firing
process. That is far better than having them adhere to an unprotected kiln
shelf and then remelting and sticking to an unsuspecting pot that comes along
in the next kiln load. To prevent that, the drops of hardened glaze are chipped
off with the protective layer of kiln wash. What is the point of this glaze
talk? It’s my revelation that I could use glaze to decorate the textured backs
of pieces without having them stick to the shelf. The ornaments lay flat on the
kiln shelf, but the glaze stays in the deeper indentations. I simply thoroughly
wipe it off the areas that actually come in contact with the shelves.
So now I have a list with about fifty names, each destined
to adorn a Santa hat with the year and, for many, “LRV” for the Lost River
Valley. There will be some added snowflakes, of course; those are more fun to
make than to shovel, for sure. The finished ornament is then
fun and interesting on both front and back, as well as personalized. I’ll let
you know how I feel about them when I get to the 49th name. Ho! Ho! Ho!
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