Hi everyone,
I am not a chemist and only have a basic knowledge of chemistry.
I am actually a potter and I am starting to make my own glazes from ingredients "picked in the field".
Ashes have been traditionally used as ingredient in glazes. For example tree ashes or seaweed ashes. I have read that in general, ashes contains different ingredients like calcium phosphate, iodine, potassium carbonate...
What interests me are the oxides and carbonates because they are the only way to create color when firing at high temperature (up to 2336 F or 1280 Celsius). I fire in oxidation.
So my question is: what oxides or carbonate would ashes from hair contains?
The oxides and carbonate that we usually use in ceramic are cobalt, iron, chrome and copper.
I also wonder if there could be any health hazard while using ashes in glazes? Could the resulting glaze release toxic compounds after being fired and cooled down when used as dish for food or a cup (such as heavy metals?)
I know I can always turn to a lab to test the toxicity, but i would do that when my glaze is ready!
Human hair (as disgusting as it might seem) is a readily available material as waste at hairdressers saloon, it is easy to burn to ashes and to turn into a powder to be mixed in glazes.
I have seen a video of someone dropping horse hair on a burning hot pot (outside of the oven), it made black burnt patterns. That is why i got to think about ashes from hair.
If you have any suggestion of natural materials that could yield interesting ashes for ceramics, I am also interested to hear your advice!
Plant material is easier to process because I don not have any ballmill, stone-hard deposits are not an option yet. It could be natural plants (I live in Scandinavia so you get an idea of the vegetation : pine, spruce, beech, blueberries, reeds..) or harvest crops waste (wheat, barley, peas...) ?
Thanks in advance!