Some time ago I started working on a tile project. I was inspired by a
visit to the Moravian Pottery and Tile Works in Doylestown, PA a few
years ago and decided to teach myself a process for making different
types of tiles. I blogged about it in December 2010 and January 2011 -
four posts in all.
At the time, I was working on tiles
with a mosaic look. I am still working on that idea, but it has been
modified. The tiles are now taking the form of three-dimensional
sculptural pieces. The metamorphosis was sudden, following as it did, a
visit to the now closed Higgins Armory Museum in Worcester, MA. There I
saw a collection of armor and arms that was quite impressive. But more
importantly, I saw heraldic animals and crests that gave me new ideas. I
stopped in at the museum's gift shop and found several books of designs
including mythological animals found in architecture the world over.
One appealed to me and I started working on it.
I
modified this and started a rough cut. It became clear that I would
need a combination of addition and subtraction to make this creature
come alive. Here is the first rough cut:
Like
a quilter, I quickly figured out that there was too much detail for
this to work, and I also needed finer tools for the detail I would keep.
I ordered a set of dentist's tools and kept at it. :After carving and
adding clay, the tile looked like this:
The
feet...yeah, I know. The idea was to start big and carve them out. They
went on and came off several times before I figured out that the whole
creature was pretty goofy, so goofy feet wouldn't really matter that
much. A little while after I drew that conclusion, I also decided that
carving the feet wasn't going to work and I started sculpting them
instead. That resulted in:
Snowshoes!
Well, this was a learning curve, and at least I was moving forward.
With a little more perseverance, I managed a pair of acceptable feet:
Then
the process of casing a mold could begin. Plaster is not a medium I
have a lot of trouble with, so this was pretty easy. Of course, it did
mean destroying the original because I cast with a moist clay original.
It has everything to do with the way clay shrinks and My lack of desire
to do the appropriate math. But once you have a single mold that works,
you can cast as many originals and make as many more molds as you wish.
here is the result of my first casting int he new mold:
Note
the bits of plaster around the edges. The border was a bit off as well.
More castings needed to be made before I got some good, clean tiles.
Once I had them, I was free to make more molds!
These
five are currently drying over a heating vent and should be ready to go
into production in about one week. Then there will be tiles! In time, I
will use a press to make these (for now, I'm using a rolling pin). The
process of getting a press made that will do this has also been one of
discovery, I started with a homemade one-armed bandit that had no
mechanical advantage and was impossible to operate without hanging from
it like a crazed monkey:
I'm
no engineer as this picture illustrates (although I must say I was
pretty proud of my work here). From this humble beginning, I looked to
make improvements. Books were read, websites were Googled, lots of
research was conducted. And finally, I found this great idea:
It's
a 12-ton shop press that I will be modifying into a tile press. There
will still be a learning curve. I'll have to figure out how much
pressure to apply to make a tile in a press mold without turning the
plaster mold into dust. I probably better make more molds...







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