Vase | Orange & Black Raku
Raku is like playing with fire! The Raku technique is essentially when glazed ceramics are pulled out of a gas kiln while they are glowing red hot and placed in a bin containing combustible organic material such as sawdust or newspaper, that catches fire. The bin is immediately closed off, starving the piece of oxygen, which creates a myriad of stunning colors within a single glaze. The unpredictability of Raku is what attracts many artists to it.
CARE: Raku is a low fire process and thus not waterproof. While beautiful, raku ware is decorative rather than functional, and it will not hold water.
Raku is like playing with fire! The Raku technique is essentially when glazed ceramics are pulled out of a gas kiln while they are glowing red hot and placed in a bin containing combustible organic material such as sawdust or newspaper, that catches fire. The bin is immediately closed off, starving the piece of oxygen, which creates a myriad of stunning colors within a single glaze. The unpredictability of Raku is what attracts many artists to it.
CARE: Raku is a low fire process and thus not waterproof. While beautiful, raku ware is decorative rather than functional, and it will not hold water.
Raku is like playing with fire! The Raku technique is essentially when glazed ceramics are pulled out of a gas kiln while they are glowing red hot and placed in a bin containing combustible organic material such as sawdust or newspaper, that catches fire. The bin is immediately closed off, starving the piece of oxygen, which creates a myriad of stunning colors within a single glaze. The unpredictability of Raku is what attracts many artists to it.
CARE: Raku is a low fire process and thus not waterproof. While beautiful, raku ware is decorative rather than functional, and it will not hold water.