I’m addicted. I didn’t think it would happen but now it’s too late. As a polymer clay addict, I thought this was too temperamental and time consuming to become another addiction. I was wrong. Wrong twice: I never thought metal could have these colors. More photos

Today's Favorite
This time I kept the temperature closer to 1550F for two hours. I forgot to raise the container up so the air and heat can circulate but it didn’t seem to matter.
There seems to be no pattern to the resulting colors. I had some that were fired before, some that dried for over 48 hours, and some that dried for about 12 hours. Last time they were in the fridge to dry, not this time. I did notice a little warping that had to be corrected this time.

Not So Identical Twins
The 2 circles had been fired and buffed. Except I did not remove a beautiful red “splotch” on one of them. Is that the one that has so much red after being fired today? The other one has a lovely gold center and more orange outer ring. But they sure don’t look like they belong together. Next time I will refire the green ones and see if they become more colorful with greens.
I suspect there is no pattern. What if it is totally random based on temperature? The difference in matching pieces fired quite near one another might also be a result of one staying in the charcoal longer than the other. What if instead of fishing them out with a slotted spoon, the charcoal could be poured through some sort of screen?
Well, there will be a next time. Maybe the mystery will be solved then.

