A lot of us use
marker pens on our glass to determine cut lines, indicate areas that need
grozing, etc. These pens have a variety
of names – felt tips, Sharpies, paint pens, fibre tips, permanent markers, laundry
markers, and many other generic and trade names.
Most, except
the paint markers, contain water or spirit based colours. Many of these
pigments are reputed to burn away during the firing of the glass.
Paint
markers and the ones that contain metallic colours rarely fire off. They are more likely to fire into the
glass. Some people take advantage of
this fact to quickly add marks that will survive the firing.
I no longer trust anything to burn off. Even
if the marks do apparently burn away, the residues are sites for devitrification
to begin.
I clean all my marks off before
firing. It only takes the marks to be fired into a favourite piece to
convert you to cleaning. If you use paint markers on black glass or coloured felt
tip marks on clear, clean it all off before firing. This removes the chance that the pigment will
remain throughout the firing and ensures the glass is spotless when it goes
into the kiln.
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