Description of the piece
The enquirer wants to cover some blemishes on the flat blank
with clear powder and also tack fuse some additional pieces to a blank to be
used for a vase drop.
Reactions
To avoid the grey appearance that often comes from
clear powder at lower temperatures, you need to fire to contour fuse at
minimum.
Outside of the requirement for a contour fuse, my
experience of making a drop vase with a tack fused blank shows disappointing
results. The temperature used in drops is not high enough to flatten the
tack fused pieces. During the drop formation, the space between the
pieces stretches more than the thicker tack fused areas. The thinner glass
becomes hot quicker than the thicker areas.
This leads to occasional stretched holes between
the tack fused pieces. The tack fused
pieces appear as protrusions above the surface whether inside or outside. Unless planned very carefully, these elements
can be ugly. They will maintain much of their original shape, contrasting with
the surrounding stretched imagery.
Recommendation
Put the piece back in the kiln and take to a full
fuse, or at the very least a contour fuse. This will enable all the glass to
stretch as one in the drop, because of nearly equal thickness. Nearly even thickness is needed to avoid stretching
some areas too thin in relation to the rest of the drop surfaces.
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