glaze$31778$ - definitie. Wat is glaze$31778$
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Wat (wie) is glaze$31778$ - definitie

CERAMIC GLAZES WHICH WERE FORMULATED FROM WOOD-ASH
Lime glaze; Lime-glaze
  • Detail of dripping rice-straw ash glaze (top), Japan, 1852
  • Sake bottle (''tokkuri'') in the form of a bamboo node, with "naturally occurring" ash glaze, most heavily collected on the shoulder. Japan, 18th century.

glazed frost         
  • A forest in Moscow a week after an incident of freezing rain
  • Glazed tree branches are noted for both their beauty and their tendency to snap
SMOOTH, TRANSPARENT AND HOMOGENEOUS ICE COATING OCCURRING WHEN FREEZING RAIN OR DRIZZLE HITS A SURFACE
Ice glaze; Glazed frost; Glaze (meteorology); Glaze ice
¦ noun a glassy coating of ice, typically caused by rain freezing on impact.
Glaze (ice)         
  • A forest in Moscow a week after an incident of freezing rain
  • Glazed tree branches are noted for both their beauty and their tendency to snap
SMOOTH, TRANSPARENT AND HOMOGENEOUS ICE COATING OCCURRING WHEN FREEZING RAIN OR DRIZZLE HITS A SURFACE
Ice glaze; Glazed frost; Glaze (meteorology); Glaze ice
Glaze or glaze ice, also called glazed frost, is a smooth, transparent and homogeneous ice coating occurring when freezing rain or drizzle hits a surface. It is similar in appearance to clear ice, which forms from supercooled water droplets.
Resinous glaze         
FOOD-GRADE SHELLAC
Confectioner's glaze; Confectioners glaze; Pure food glaze; Natural glaze; Confectioner's resin; Pharmaceutical glaze
Resinous glaze is an alcohol-based solution of various types of food-grade shellac. The shellac is derived from the raw material sticklac, which is a resin scraped from the branches of trees left from when the small insect, Kerria lacca (also known as Laccifer lacca), creates a hard, waterproof cocoon.

Wikipedia

Ash glaze

Ash glazes are ceramic glazes made from the ash of various kinds of wood or straw. They have historically been important in East Asia, especially Chinese pottery, Korean pottery, and Japanese pottery. Many traditionalist East Asian potteries still use ash glazing, and it has seen a large revival in studio pottery in the West and East. Some potters like to achieve random effects by setting up the kiln so that ash created during firing falls onto the pots; this is called "natural" or "naturally occurring" ash glaze. Otherwise the ash is mixed with water, and often clay, and applied as a paste.

Ash glazing began around 1500 BC, in China during the Shang Dynasty, initially by accident as ash from the burnt wood in the kiln landed on pots. Around 1000 BC, the Chinese apparently realized that the ash covering the pieces was causing the glaze so they started adding the ash as a glaze before the pot went into the kiln. Ash glaze was the first glaze used in East Asia, and contained only ash, clay, and water.

One of the ceramic fluxes in ash glazes is calcium oxide (CaO), commonly known as quicklime, and most ash glazes are part of the lime glaze family, not all of which use ash. In some ash glazes extra lime was added to the ash, which may have been the case with Chinese Yue ware. A relatively high temperature of around 1170 °C is required, high enough to make the body into stoneware or (above about 1200 °C and with the right materials) porcelain.