Hi Marty, thank you for your reply. When you write that #1870 has one of the higher flow temps, do you mean it is hard or soft firing or that it is difficult or easy to put a trans color over it?
I had read that reds, oranges, opaque, opalescent, transparent, should not be fired at the highest temps if that is what you mean? This was in a book called "Cloisonne' Enameling & Jewelry Making" by Felicia Liban & Louise Mitchell, p. 19.
Mary Rose
Hi Mary Rose, the Thompson "workbook" is their technical reference. It has a lot of terms a normal human being can't pronounce or understand.
I recomend making a simple chart that has some way of visually understanding the variables of the enamels you plan to use. Ie some work well as base, some are lower temp, and therfore... some need to be fired last.
For example in the kitchen you have to bake the cake before you frost it because the frosting works better cold and is ruined by heat.
There are so many variables.
On copper they often do a very high temp fire to clear the oxides, The firescale oxides actually go into the enamel. But if you over fire painting enamels they will move or disappear. I guess the reds are like that.
In addition to the book you mentioned there are several others worth getting Linda Darty and Lilyan Bachrach.
I don't have much experience keeping notes.
M
Hello, thank you for your reply. This red does not fire smooth. I have tried it a high temp, 1500 and a lower, 1300. It is bumpy and looks underfired. It also pops off the copper sometimes and does not fire with transp over it.
Mary Rose
Thank you Lindsey. I read that the reds should be fired for shorter times and at lower temps. I think we have to make our own adjustments and forget what we read. I am going to take your reply in consideration and fire this red longer and at 1500. Is that what you mean by super hot?
Mary Rose
Thank you for your reply. I have the Bachrach book and the Darty. I don't much like the Darty book as there are too many photos and she is not thorough on a subject but keeps jumping around. She does not go deep enough.
Mary Rose
I think the advice you have gotten: to fire the transparent reds low (1300-1385F/700-750C) and short (depending on the size of your piece) is good. It has also been said that transparent red looks best over gold though I don't really understand why. Anyway, my point is that opaques are a whole different story.
Does anyone have problems with Orient Red #1870 over copper? What is the ideal temp for this red? Would there be any reason for firing an opaque over a covering white?
Thank You,
Mary Rose