
For the past several years while the courtyard was being developed, I've envisioned a curved, raised hearth for our cast-iron chiminea. When we had the landscaping work done in 2008 I had Bill lay out the curve; Robert formed it up and poured it in concrete. I asked Bill to cut out a cardboard template with sections that would mimic the lines in our living room windows. I used the template to cut oversized stoneware tiles, with my slab roller set at 3/8" thick. Among other valuable lessons, I learned that I needed to add extra grog to the clay to help keep the tiles from cracking. If they made it through bisque-firing without obvious giant cracks, I glazed them with cobalt blue M7. When loaded in the cone 10 kiln, they needed a flat shelf and a layer of grog underneath. I had to re-make several of the tiles because they weren't flat or had spots where the glaze didn't stick. Overall, I've messed around with these for a year now, and finally got the last tiles I needed out of the glaze load at Gavilan last week. Two of them have cracks, but I've decided I can live with them. They're flat and blue!
This morning, Bill moved the chiminea out of the way so I can see how the tiles fit on the hearth. My fingers are crossed!
I once knew a caveman named Grog. But that was a long time ago...
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