Frits
Clay & Minerals Frit 5301
Frits are parts of a glaze recipe that have been melted and ground to be added into a new glaze recipe. Frit 5301 is a material that is great for high thermal expansion crackle glazes. It can also help with shivering in other glazes. This product was formerly called Frit 4101. Information gathered from Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database and The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques by Frank Hamer.
$6.00 - $107.00
Clay & Minerals Frit 3110
Frits are parts of a glaze recipe that have been melted and ground to be added into a new glaze recipe. Frit 3110 is a soft sodium borosilicate frit that can be found in recipes of all temperatures, commonly found in crystal glazes. This material has a similar chemistry to feldspars, making it useful in high feldspar recipes to substitute some of the feldspar for frit 3110 to make the mixture have more slurry properties and add kaolin to the mix. When frit 3110 is used in combination with frit 3403, bright and semi matte wall glazes can be produced. Information gathered from Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database and The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques by Frank Hamer.
$6.00 - $95.00
Clay & Minerals Frit 3124
Frits are parts of a glaze recipe that have been melted and ground to be added into a new glaze recipe. Frit 3124 is one of the most popular and useful frits due to its almost glaze-like chemical balance. The material is a source of calcium boron in glazes and can be used to make wall tile and pottery glazes. This frit melts at a low temperature and has medium thermal expansion, making it fit most clay bodies. Information gathered from Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database and The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques by Frank Hamer.
$6.00 - $135.00
Clay & Minerals Frit 3134
Frits are parts of a glaze recipe that have been melted and ground to be added into a new glaze recipe. Frit 3134 is a very popular frit that is used as a melter in all temperatures. Many reasons make this frit so popular in the ceramics industry. One of these reasons being its high boron content, making it a great flux. Another being it's high calcium oxide content which is crucial to making chrome tin pinks and maroons. This frit contains no Alumina, meaning the alumina can be sourced from the clay instead which will harden and suspend the slurry. Lastly, the material has high. sodium which reduces feldspar and gives alumina more opportunity to come from the clay. Information gathered from Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database and The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques by Frank Hamer.
$6.00 - $160.00
Clay & Minerals Frit 3195
Frits are parts of a glaze recipe that have been melted and ground to be added into a new glaze recipe. Frit 3195 works well at stoneware temperatures and is a great source of boron. This frit can be a complete low fire glaze, with the addition of kaolin, and adding more kaolin and silica will allow it to go to higher temperatures. It is not good for making underglaze as it has a high boron content. Information gathered from Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database and The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques by Frank Hamer.
$6.00 - $165.00
Clay & Minerals Frit 284M
Frits are parts of a glaze recipe that have been melted and ground to be added into a new glaze recipe. Frit 284M is a barium frit that is useful in barium matte floor tile glazes and making bright colors in cones 05-03. It is a replacement for frit 3289. Information gathered from Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database and The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques by Frank Hamer.
$6.00
Clay & Minerals Fusion Frit F38
Strontium Flux OXIDE ANALYSIS FORMULA CaO 4.20% 0.230 Na2O 5.50% 0.272 SrO 16.80% 0.498 Al2O3 4.20% 0.126 B2O3 15.00% 0.662 SiO2 53.10% 2.712 ZrO2 1.20% 0.030 Oxide Weight = 307Formula Weight = 307Co-efficient of Linear Expansion = 6.18Frit Softening Point = 1550°F Information from the Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database
$8.00
Clay & Minerals Fusion Frit F69
Frits are parts of a glaze recipe that have been melted and ground to be added into a new glaze recipe. Fusion Frit F69 is a frit with low thermal expansion, making it great as a base glaze. This frit is particularly useful in solving crazing problems in low and medium temperature glazes. Information gathered from Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database and The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques by Frank Hamer.
$10.00 - $445.00
Clay & Minerals Frit 3292
Frits are parts of a glaze recipe that have been melted and ground to be added into a new glaze recipe. Frit 3292 is a balanced glaze material, meaning it can make up the bulk of recipe. It is useful in firstfire sanitary ware (bathtubs, sinks, toilets, etc). Information gathered from Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database and The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques by Frank Hamer.
$4.00
Clay & Minerals Frit 3269
Frits are parts of a glaze recipe that have been melted and ground to be added into a new glaze recipe. Frit 3269 is a significant source of boric oxide and alumina oxide with almost no calcium oxide. The material is used in gloss tile glazes fro cones 06-01. The frit is balanced enough to use on its own, but has a high thermal expansion, making it useful as a crackle glaze. Information gathered from Digitalfire Ceramic Materials Database and The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques by Frank Hamer.
$6.00 - $85.00