You've put in some hard work, dealt with some trial and error, and now your pottery masterpieces are ready for the next phase. The pottery-making process usually requires two different stages of kiln firing: bisque and glaze. Allow the pieces to dry completely after construction.
Any trimming and moderation should be performed when the clay is in the leather hard stage. Afterward, it should be placed on an open surface and left alone for at least two days. The actual length of time will vary according to the size of the piece and the thickness of the clay.
Section your fully dried pieces together by height for bisque firing (which will take place in an electric kiln). Place the initial support posts inside the kiln. They should be a fraction higher than the tallest piece of pottery in the first layer.
Place your initial pottery pieces in the electric kiln, around the supports. After the first layer of pots are in place, shelves are put on top of the supports for the next layer of ... more.
Firing pottery without a kiln is possible but requires outdoor space and plenty of wood. Modern artisans can accomplish this time-consuming task by borrowing a technique used by ancient Native American tribes. Clay must be heated to a temperature of 1,000 degrees F to become hardened pottery.
Tribes used open flames to heat clay to 1,400 degrees F to make earthenware for the creation of tools, storage and cooking items. Clay will break if heated to temperatures in excess of 2,400 degrees F. Create a fire ring in an open setting.
Follow all local burning laws. Use fire safety equipment and have extinguishers on hand. Place bricks inside the fire ring to hold the clay items.
Put clay on the bricks using fire-safe tongs. Cover pottery stack with a layer of animal manure. The animal waste insulates the heat around the clay.
Add a layer of clay, straw or sand to the top of the manure layer. Poke a 3-inch opening in the top of the mound layer to vent the heat. Poke additional same-size ... more.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.