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  • Mosaic Tile Backsplash
  • From "Crafters Coast to Coast"
    episode HCC2C-146F
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    Click here to view a larger image.

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Project by Tamara Sherman of Burnsville, Minn.

    Tamara loves clay! "I love the smell of it; I love the feel of it; I love everything about it!" That's obvious in this vibrant and playful mosaic tile backsplash.

    Materials:

    low-fire white earthenware clay
    low-fire underglaze
    low-fire overglaze
    needle tool
    sgraffito tool

    Steps:

    1. The clay must first be wedged, which is a process of slamming the clay onto the floor to force out the trapped air pockets and develop a uniform texture. It also allows you to shape the clay into the shape it needs to be before putting it through the slab roller.

    2. The wedge of clay is then passed through the roller to make it into an even desired thickness slab of clay, preferably 1/4-inch thickness.

    3. Cut the slab into the desired shape and trim the edges to square it off.

    4. Transfer the slab onto a piece of drywall, which will provide stability as well help to remove the moisture from the clay slab.

    5. While the clay is wet, the design is painted on using an underglaze. Follow by drawing a texture design using a sgraffito tool, a pencil or the end of a paintbrush--even a twig from a tree.

    6. The clay slab is then sectioned and cut into several smaller tiles with a needle tool or knife. It is then set out to dry for at least a week.

    7. The tiles are then bisque fired, which is a firing to harden but not mature the clay body.

    8. Apply a clear glaze to the tile. The tile is then glaze fired .This a firing cycle to the temperature at which the glaze material will melt to form a glasslike surface coating onto the tile.

    9. The tile is then mounted onto a board onto which mortar has been applied. Set for 24 hours and then grout.

    10. The finished piece may then be framed and hung on the wall as a decoration or backsplash.

    Website: Clayhillpotteryandtile.com

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