Inlay technique ceramics

Discover Pinterest’s best ideas and inspiration for Inlay technique ceramics. Get inspired and try out new things.
39 people searched this
·
Last updated 1w
ClayShare on Instagram: "😍Mishima Reveal! One of my favorite parts of the Mishima technique is seeing out the lines pop once you inlay with underglaze! Here I used @speedball_ceramics Black underglaze but you can use any color you want.
👉Check out my Mishima classes on ClayShare.com
Save 30% off Speedball Underglaze at @clayscapes_pottery with the code: SB30 thru midnight 11/10/24! Carved with a @diamondcoretools L3 Diamond Stylus tool! #madewithclayshare" Ceramic Inlay Technique, Underglaze Techniques Pottery, Black Glaze Recipe, Underglaze Painting On Pottery, Mishima Ceramics, Mishima Technique, Underglaze Techniques, Underglaze Ideas, Underglaze Designs

ClayShare on Instagram: "😍Mishima Reveal! One of my favorite parts of the Mishima technique is seeing out the lines pop once you inlay with underglaze! Here I used @speedball_ceramics Black underglaze but you can use any color you want. 👉Check out my Mishima classes on ClayShare.com Save 30% off Speedball Underglaze at @clayscapes_pottery with the code: SB30 thru midnight 11/10/24! Carved with a @diamondcoretools L3 Diamond Stylus tool! #madewithclayshare"

9
Josephine Mae Design on Instagram: "Using the ceramic technique “Mishima” to inlay the black underglaze into this lifted Tacoma truck design. 🛻✨ Mishima is a technique in ceramics where a contracting color of underglaze or slip is applied into the groves on an etched clay body. Then the extra is scraped or wiped away from the high points of the clay to reveal the groves left with the design. This inlay technique is used often for detailed fine illustrative works." Inlay Technique Ceramics, Inlay Ceramics, Mishima Ceramics, Underglaze Ceramics, Underglaze Techniques, Lifted Tacoma, Ceramic Studio Ideas, Ideas For Ceramics, Sgraffito Technique

Josephine Mae Design on Instagram: "Using the ceramic technique “Mishima” to inlay the black underglaze into this lifted Tacoma truck design. 🛻✨ Mishima is a technique in ceramics where a contracting color of underglaze or slip is applied into the groves on an etched clay body. Then the extra is scraped or wiped away from the high points of the clay to reveal the groves left with the design. This inlay technique is used often for detailed fine illustrative works."

25
How to Use a Clay Ribbon Tool and a Slip Trailer for a New Twist on Inlay Ceramics | Ceramic Arts Daily» » Daily | Bloglovin’ Inlay Ceramics, Clay Ribbon, Slip Trailing, Pottery Slip, Pottery Tutorials, Ceramic Arts Daily, Ceramic Pineapple, Pottery Decoration, Clay Techniques

We’ve done a lot of articles on slip inlay—often called Mishima—here on Ceramic Arts Network. Here’s a good introduction to Mishima pottery if you’re unfamiliar. Typically Mishima is used to create ve

83
Ayla Mullen on Instagram: "Here's a glimpse into my inlay process✨  This video shows how I add color to most of my work using a traditional inlay technique called Mishima. I start with a bone dry pot that I've carved a design into at an earlier point. First, I cover the piece in underglaze, making sure to get color down into all the crevasses of my carved design. Then, I begin wiping away the color from the surface of the pot, revealing the carved design now filled in with color. It took meany years to get a consistent and cleanly inlaid design, especially since I do this process on stoneware clay rather than porcelain, meaning I have to work around the natural grittiness of the clay body.   Some tips for trying Mishima: make sure you introduce as little water as possible to the process at Inlay Ceramics, Mishima Ceramics, Underglaze Techniques, Underglaze Painting, Line Quality, Pottery Videos, Pottery Techniques, Pottery Designs, Stoneware Clay

Ayla Mullen on Instagram: "Here's a glimpse into my inlay process✨ This video shows how I add color to most of my work using a traditional inlay technique called Mishima. I start with a bone dry pot that I've carved a design into at an earlier point. First, I cover the piece in underglaze, making sure to get color down into all the crevasses of my carved design. Then, I begin wiping away the color from the surface of the pot, revealing the carved design now filled in with color. It took…

20

Related interests