American ceramic supply company offers the best ceramic stilts in the industry to fire your low fire pottery.
What are stilts used for in ceramics.
With this off topic video for the week you will learn how to make your own stilts.
Stilts are the little clay triangles with metal coming out of them.
By stilts by the dozen and save.
They do not recommend ever stilting their stoneware bisque.
Traditional shops paint your own pottery studios schools organizations and home based hobbyist just love our stilts.
Without stilts your bisque and work done to it would be damaged.
The use of this stilt can be deduced from damage to the glaze where the three raised points were in direct contact with it.
Stilts come in a wide variety of shapes sizes and configurations and their use depends on the pieces to be fired.
Metal points can bend so use multiple pointed stilts and do not fire heavy objects on stilts.
A similar type of stilt appears to have been used in the staffordshire area and perhaps scotland between the 1760s and 1850s.
Below is a list of required and optional equipment for your stilt making pleasure.
Cone 10 roselli kiln stilts supporting your work since 1975.
If you used a regular polygon shape you can mosaic the stilts to handle larger pieces.
If you are into ceramics you probably have all the stuff you need already.
Your order will normally ship next business day.
Stilts also prevent glazed pieces from fusing to each other other shelves and the kiln itself.
Stilt 3 clay points 2 not meant for glazes item helps with air and heat circulation.
Also known as amaco 4.
Mayco makes a higher fire stoneware bisque.
Firing in your kiln up to cone 10 shipping anywhere in the us and internationally.