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I will show you how found a recipe on Facebook, assessed it, substituted my own materials, tested it, adjusted it.
Silky Mattes are more difficult at cone 6 than at cone 10. It is common to find ones that either gloss on slight over-firing, are too matte, are not durable (they cutlery mark), ones that have a poor functional surfaces (and stain easily) and ones that craze.
I found this recipe on Facebook, it was called "Moores Matte".. Let's take a look at it in Insight-live.
Gerstley borate 9
| Recipes |
G2928C - Ravenscrag Silky Matte for Cone 6
Plainsman Cone 6 Ravenscrag Slip based glaze. It can be found among others at http://ravenscrag.com. |
| URLs |
https://digitalfire.com/university/insight-live/overview/Insight-Live%20Overview.html
Insight-Live.com Overview Video |
| URLs |
http://m.youtube.com/user/tonywilliamhansen
YouTube channel for Tony Hansen |
| Glossary |
Matte Glaze
Random material mixes that melt well overwhelmingly want to be glossy, creating a matte glaze that is also functional is not an easy task. |
| Glossary |
Glaze Chemistry
Glaze chemistry is the study of how the oxide chemistry of glazes relate to the way they fire. It accounts for color, surface, hardness, texture, melting temperature, thermal expansion, etc. |

This picture has its own page with more detail, click here to see it.
You will see examples of replacing unavailable materials (especially frits), fixing various issues (e.g. running, crazing, settling), making them melt more, adjusting matteness, etc. Insight-Live has an extensive help system (the round blue icon on the left) that also deals with fixing real-world problems and understanding glazes and clay bodies.
| By Tony Hansen Follow me on ![]() | ![]() |
Buy me a coffee and we can talk