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About
Porcelain
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Porcelain belongs to the large group of
materials called "ceramics", which are products made mainly
of clay or clay raw materials with mineral content. Ceramics
range in texture from coarse, such as plain clay tile, to
progressively finer products such as earthenware, majolica,
faience, and stoneware, to porcelain --- the finest textured
of all ceramics. Porcelain represents the ultimate in ceramic
quality and beauty. Porcelain consists of two main parts:
1) the compound, or body, and 2) the glaze. The white, glassy
paste used to make the body accounts for porcelain's translucence
and differentiates it from stoneware. The composition of the
body's glaze is equivalent to glass and further enhances porcelain's
translucence.
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Are
there different types of porcelain?
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There are two types
of porcelain: hard porcelain and soft porcelain. Hard porcelain
is produced mainly on the European continent. Soft porcelain
is produced predominantly in China, Japan, and England.
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Most of the porcelain
produced in Germany is hard porcelain. Its main features are
its high kaolin content (50%) and its feldspar glaze, first
fused at a temperature of 1400-1500o Celsius. At the same
time, this heating process sinters the porcelain body's structured
particles --- that is, it brings the particles close together
and links them. The heating process also fuses the glaze to
the body underneath. The result is an extremely strong piece
of porcelain, with an extremely hard surface.
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What
is soft porcelain, also known as bone china?
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Soft porcelain, also known as soft-paste
porcelain or bone china, consists of 50-60% bone ash or phosphates
in the paste and a lower kaolin content than that used in
hard porcelain. Because of the relatively low kaolin content,
the firing temperature for soft porcelain is lower than for
hard porcelain: soft porcelain is first fired at 1240-1280o
C. Due to this lower firing temperature, soft porcelain does
not have as high a tensile strength or resistance as hard
porcelain.
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What
is bisque porcelain, also known as biscuit porcelain?
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Bisque, or biscuit, porcelain is the name
given to porcelain that is fired without glazing. The finished,
fired piece is impermeable to water but has a rough surface
finish.
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Porcelain is pressure-resistant to 5000
kg per cm2. Expressed in another way, a fully loaded 10,000
kg railroad car can be placed on a 2 cm2 piece of porcelain
without its breaking.
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What
does translucence mean?
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Translucence is the distinguishing characteristic
of genuine porcelain. That is, diffused light will shine through
a piece of fine porcelain. The brighter and clearer the translucence
of a piece, the better the quality of the porcelain.
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Despite diligent studies and rigorous tests,
it has not yet been determined whether or not porcelain ages.
It does retain its properties of hardness, density, tensile
strength, brightness, and translucence --- all of which are
unaffected by time. Porcelain is likewise resistant to corrosion.
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What
does porcelain consist of?
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Porcelain (hard paste porcelain) consists
of 50 parts kaolin (porcelain earth), 25 parts quartz, and
25 parts feldspar. These components are bonded into a paste
by grinding, mixing, and fusing with each other.
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How
are the different pieces of porcelain produced?
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There are several basic techniques for
producing porcelain pieces: molding, shaping, casting, and
turning. These techniques may be used alone or in combination,
depending on the size, shape, and complexity of the piece
being created. Artisans use plaster molds to form the top
of plates and other flat pieces; they use a template or rolling
tool to fashion the bottom of these pieces. They also use
a template or rolling tool to shape the inside of cups and
other hollow pieces, then rely on a plaster mold to form the
outside of those pieces. Craftsmen use a hollow casting technique
to fashion pots, bowls, and jugs. They use surface casting
or solid casting to form oval or square platters and salad
bowls. The technique of turning is reserved for pieces that
are round. Casting is typically used to create porcelain figurines.
However, if a piece is highly complex, artisans may cast it
in smaller component parts and later join the parts into a
finished whole. For instance, Kaiser's white-headed eagle
is composed of 25 separate parts. Plaster molds may be either
cast or turned. For instance, patterns for relief or raised
designs, such as Kaiser's Dubarry tableware or bisque vases,
are inserted into molds. The relief design is automatically
embossed onto the plaster by turning, overturning, or casting.
The plaster draws out the water from the moist compound in
the mold, causing the porcelain body to shrink so that the
body may be easily removed from the mold.
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When
and why is porcelain annealed?
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Before the annealing process, Kaiser artisans
clean the porcelain pieces by removing any sharp protruding
edges, such as casting seams. The artisans anneal the pieces
by heating them to 900-1000o C and then gradually cooling
them. This process frees the porcelain pieces from internal
stress and removes their water content. The pieces remain
porous but become strong and leather-hard; they cannot be
reshaped. Next, workers use compressed air to remove dust
from the porcelain pieces. At this point, craftsmen stamp
the pieces with Kaiser's trademark and send the pieces on
to the glazing shop for the next step in the manufacturing
process.
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How
is glaze applied to porcelain?
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The thin, liquid glaze is carefully mixed
in a large trough. This milk-like glaze is continuously agitated
to prevent separation and settlement of its ingredients. Craftsmen
dip and wash each porcelain piece in the glaze, which remains
on the surface of the piece like a coating of flour. Artisans
wipe the pieces with moist foam rubber strips to remove glaze
from those contact points which will rest on a porcelain "setter".
This setter supports the glazed piece during the firing process
and is then discarded.
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Porcelain is smooth-fired in tunnel kilns,
which are approximately 80 m long. The porcelain pieces ride
on special cars through the firing zone and move slowly on
to the cooling zone.
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Why
does a piece of porcelain have rough patches?
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Rough patches on porcelain pieces are
inevitable because of the nature of the firing process. Under
the high heat of firing, the porcelain glaze becomes highly
viscous and sticks to the surface of the disposable porcelain
setter on which the piece is resting. A fired piece cannot
be lifted from the setter without leaving rough patches at
the points of contact between the piece being fired and the
setter on which it rests. To minimize this problem, before
firing, craftsmen remove as much wet glaze as possible from
these contact points. At high quality porcelain factories,
like Kaiser-Porzellan, cups, for example, are fired with the
opening facing downward on the setter. This method produces
a cup with a smoothly glazed base but a slightly rough upper
rim where the rim rested on the setter. This slight roughness
on the tiny surface area of the rim is a comparatively minor
flaw which would not likely be noticed by the casual observer.
However, because Kaiser-Porzellan strives for perfection,
our craftsmen take the extra step of painstakingly polishing
the cup's upper rim to remove any trace of roughness. This
is an optional step, but worthwhile because it results in
a piece that is perfectly smooth on all surfaces.
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In-glazing is a technique for permanently
protecting decorated porcelain pieces from normal mechanical
and chemical stresses. Artisans first decorate porcelain pieces
by transferring or sliding screen-printed designs onto smooth-fired
porcelain bodies. Next they add appropriate metal oxides and
liquids to the glaze to achieve the desired color effect.
After they apply the glaze to the porcelain bodies, craftsmen
fast-fire the pieces at 1200-1300o C for 60-120 minutes. During
this firing, the decorative design is sealed under the glaze,
or embedded within it; thus the term "in-glaze".
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On-glazing is a technique in which a smooth-fired
porcelain body is coated with a color-enhanced glaze, the
decoration is then applied onto the glaze, and lastly the
piece is fired. The firing temperature for on-glazed pieces
is determined by the melting point of the glaze's colors,
which is 750-900o C, for quality control of the colors. In
this process, the decoration is fused onto the glaze; thus
the term "on-glaze".
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How
long does porcelain decoration last?
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In-glazing permanently protects porcelain
decoration from all kinds of external mechanical and chemical
stresses because the decoration is sealed under or embedded
within a hard, durable glaze. On-glazing fuses the decoration
onto the glazed piece. Because an on-glazed decoration is
more exposed to external stresses, it is more susceptible
to damage.
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What
does "staffage" mean?
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"Staffage", from the German word "staffieren",
meaning to dress, trim, adorn, is the art of embellishing
porcelain by the skillful addition of hand-painted colors
and metallic trim (gold, silver, or platinum). "Staffage"
can be used to accent knobs, handles, and rims of tableware
and to enhance either smooth or relief-decorated period table
services. The careful and tasteful application of "staffage"
highlights a piece's shape and a variety of other design elements.
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What
makes porcelain the ideal tableware?
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The ideal tableware is hard and smooth,
has an impermeable surface, with a finish that is highly resistant
to mechanical and chemical stresses. Porcelain meets all these
important requirements. Because porcelain is hard, it resists
cracking, cutting, and scratching. It is impervious to the
acids and alkalis found in the normal household. It has been
proved that porcelain is even bactericidal. Porcelain has
no odor or taste of its own and absorbs neither from food
or drink. Fine porcelain is therefore extremely practical
as well as beautiful.
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