How many bottles can be fired at once
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How many bottles can be fired at once
I am using a Paragon Ceramic Kiln to fire my glass. I am going to try slumping some regular wine bottles but am wondering how many to put in my kiln and about how far apart as I know that when they slump they will spread but by how much. My kiln shelf looks to be approx 23" and is round. I am going to use fiber paper directly onto the shelf to do the slumping. I tried looking in the archives but as of yet have not found the answer to my question.
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I found that sprinkling a fine layer of sand underneath the bottles keeps them from rolling and also from sticking to the bottom. The sand seperates with ease afterwards by brushing it off with the hand. It does leave small sand marks underneath but it does not matter since its the bottm no one sees.
I can fire up between 18- 22 bottles at a time.
I can fire up between 18- 22 bottles at a time.
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Us of wine bottles
As for use of the flattened wine bottles....I received one (dark beautiful colbalt blue) as a gift and use it as a cheese plate and server. It came with a small cheeze knife embelshed with a grape motif and coordinating cheeze holder. Looks great hanging on the wall. Since it has a neck as a handle you could serve all kinds of little tidbits. lydia
i use them for spoon rests on the stove, and serving things. i use the down side as it's much flatter. sometimes i sandblast the flat side, and sometimes i blast an image. these sell well in craft fairs around here if they're blasted with southwest designs.whitejoyce wrote:Happy to know someone is doing wine bottles. Flattening them I mean. Is there more can be done with them after the flatten of them?
Open for any suggestions, commments.
another hint is to figure out the temp where they aren't fused flat, but sort of organically partially slumped. they work much better as a spoon rest as the top dents down somewhat and forms a little bowl, and the neck makes a curved handle. i put a U shaped piece of metal under the neck to make a higher handle sometimes.
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it depends upon how flat you want them. i use 1500 to get them really flat, around 1300 for differing times (depending upon type) to get them to be more rounded and bowl shaped.Tajai wrote:what would be the most effective temp to fire bottles at ? is they're anyway to get rid of those bubbles caught by the neck of the bottle collapsing first ?
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hoknok - What size of a kiln do you have if you fire that many bottles at once compared to Charlie's three to four. Do you use multiple shelves for each firing or just one?
Sandi,
I have a 22 cubic Ft. Cone Art kiln from Cananda. I can fire three or four shelves. Each level can hold about 9-12 depending on the bottle layout and size. I have a local wine/Bar dinner supply me the extra bottles on a weekly basis. My kiln was used for ceramics before I switched to glass.
I will also fuse bottles together to make, tables, crosses, odd looking animals and the standard cheese plates. I also experiment with placing colored beads, glass and things inside of it.
About half of what I fire is a keeper, the rest is chaulked up to testing and fun.
I think I am about to slow down on these bottles since I got it out of my system. I just have about four cases left to fire and will donate them to a local church for a fund raising event.