I'm a newbie, and I made only very few experiments with fusing and slumping. While my fused pieces come out as I expected them, I have some problem with slumping. I always (3 times so far
 ) get a matte surface where the glass deformed. In the center of the pieces the surface stayed shiny. I fired twice these pieces, first I full fused them at the 1510 degree process temp. The second firing was for slumping, at 1200 degree. All 3 pieces had the same problem, no matter how thick it was the glass or how fast or slow was the firing speed. The matte surface is not even, but stayed glossy where the glass is "higher" - above bubbles, and waves as you can see on the photos.
) get a matte surface where the glass deformed. In the center of the pieces the surface stayed shiny. I fired twice these pieces, first I full fused them at the 1510 degree process temp. The second firing was for slumping, at 1200 degree. All 3 pieces had the same problem, no matter how thick it was the glass or how fast or slow was the firing speed. The matte surface is not even, but stayed glossy where the glass is "higher" - above bubbles, and waves as you can see on the photos.I'm not sure if it's devit or not. I think it is not, because the whole slumping process was below the devit zone. The most interesting thing for me is that I put another pice for slumping while a tack fusing programme was going on. This piece was already a waste because of other reasons, and I was just curious what it's gonna do in the kiln. As for 5 layer tack fuse the program was quite slow with a 1410 degree process temperature. It slumped and its surface stayed clean and shiny.
Any idea what it can be and how to avoid this matte surface? Shall I go as high as 1400 just for slumping??
Thanks for any clue
 Fortunately I don't have any. But I can check my neighbourhood
 Fortunately I don't have any. But I can check my neighbourhood