June 19, 2010 2:04 AM EDT
Hello Patsy,
This is interesting. I never learnt about coefficients of expansion until I started having contact with enamellers from the other side of the pond. The term we use to know which enamels to use in which order or next to which, is hardness. The tests you just described, we call them hardness palettes. It is also not advised to mix brands, at least without testing first
All this time, I thought that both these things were not the same, and that you had to have both things in mind, but that I mainly didn't have to worry because I tend to use only Soyer, and when I mix brands is when I have to be careful.
I have only ever had problems by layering Soyer and Schauer colours (if I remember well, it was Schauer on top of Soyer). Most of the times I do layer them, I don't have a problem (I use Soyers on top of Schauer 64 very often).
And I am now thoroughly confused, since those that cracked had very similar "hardnesses".
I think I really have to read the Thompson workbook.
Hello Patsy,
This is interesting. I never learnt about coefficients of expansion until I started having contact with enamellers from the other side of the pond. The term we use to know which enamels to use in which order or next to which, is hardness. The tests you just described, we call them hardness palettes. It is also not advised to mix brands, at least without testing first
All this time, I thought that both these things were not the same, and that you had to have both things in mind, but that I mainly didn't have to worry because I tend to use only Soyer, and when I mix brands is when I have to be careful.
I have only ever had problems by layering Soyer and Schauer colours (if I remember well, it was Schauer on top of Soyer). Most of the times I do layer them, I don't have a problem (I use Soyers on top of Schauer 64 very often).
And I am now thoroughly confused, since those that cracked had very similar "hardnesses".
I think I really have to read the Thompson workbook.