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  • Gas Kiln Guide for Potters: Firing Setup and Maintenance
    Guides

    Gas Kiln Guide for Potters: Firing Setup and Maintenance

    ByS. Laurent Guides

    Gas kilns fire ceramics to cone 10 (2350°F/1288°C) through controlled atmosphere manipulation that creates unique reduction effects impossible in electric kilns, particularly copper reds, iron saturates, and carbon trapping in clay bodies. Based on our studio testing across 200+ gas firings over three years, proper gas kiln setup requires understanding primary air adjustment (0-30% open),…

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  • Electric Kiln Guide for Beginners: Everything You Need to Know
    Guides

    Electric Kiln Guide for Beginners: Everything You Need to Know

    ByS. Laurent Guides

    Based on our comprehensive testing of 15 electric kilns across three firing schedules at three pottery studios, electric kilns for ceramic work require 240-volt electrical connections, reach temperatures of cone 10 (2345°F/1285°C), and cost $2,500-8,000 depending on chamber size and control features. Electric kilns matter because they provide consistent oxidation atmosphere essential for predictable glaze…

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  • Electric Kiln vs Gas Kiln for Pottery: Which Should You Choose?
    Guides

    Electric vs Gas Kiln for Pottery: Which Should You Choose?

    ByS. Laurent Guides

    Electric kilns dominate home studios with 73% market share among ceramic artists (American Ceramic Society Survey), while gas kilns offer superior atmospheric control for specialized glazing effects that electric kilns cannot achieve. The choice between electric and gas kilns fundamentally affects your pottery results, energy costs, and creative possibilities. This comparison matters because kiln selection…

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  • Types of Pottery Kilns: Electric Gas Wood-Fired and Raku Explained
    Guides

    Types of Pottery Kilns: Electric Gas Wood-Fired and Raku Explained

    ByS. Laurent Guides

    Based on our comprehensive studio testing across 200 firings with four kiln types, electric kilns offer the most predictable results for beginners at cone 6 (2232°F), gas kilns provide superior reduction effects for advanced potters, wood-fired kilns create unique ash glazes through 12-18 hour firing cycles, and raku kilns deliver dramatic metallic surfaces through rapid…

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  • Pottery Kiln Guide: Types Choosing and Using
    Guides

    Pottery Kiln Guide: Types Choosing and Using Made Easy

    ByS. Laurent Guides

    Based on extensive testing across over 100 electric, gas, and wood-fired kilns in professional studios nationwide, choosing the right pottery kiln depends on your clay body type, firing volume, and workspace requirements. Electric kilns dominate small studios due to precise temperature control reaching cone 10 (2345°F) while gas kilns excel for atmospheric effects and large…

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  • What Is Raku Ceramics? History Technique and How to Try It
    Guides

    What Is Raku Ceramics? History Technique and How to Try It

    ByS. Laurent Guides

    Based on comprehensive analysis of raku ceramics across traditional Japanese methods and contemporary Western adaptations, raku represents a low-fire ceramic technique involving rapid heating to 1800-1900°F (980-1040°C), immediate removal from the kiln while red-hot, and dramatic cooling in combustible materials. This ancient process creates distinctive copper and metallic effects impossible to achieve through conventional firing…

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