Ceramic Jewellery Ceramics Handbooks

Join us as we get creative making ceramics beads, brooches, earrings and rings. In this first class we will show you a variety of hand forming techniques to help you bring your jewellery ideas to life ...

Historically, traditional ceramics like porcelain, brick, and earthenware were primarily composed of clays and silicates and were used by early civilizations to create functional objects. Over time, ...

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Traditional ceramic raw materials include clay minerals such as kaolinite, whereas more recent materials include aluminium oxide, more commonly known as alumina. Modern ceramic materials, which are classified as advanced ceramics, include silicon carbide and tungsten carbide.

Clay, water, and powdered earthy elements or minerals such as silicone, fireclay, alumina, magnesia, calcia, feldspar, titanium dioxide, etc. are commonly used to make ceramics. Particular inorganic, non-metallic components are combined to create them; clay is usually used as a base ingredient.

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From a chemical viewpoint, we define ceramics in terms of what they're not.

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Altogether, the raw materials employed in traditional ceramics fall into three commonly recognized groups: clay, silica, and feldspar. These groups are described below.

Depending on their method of formation, ceramics can be dense or lightweight. Typically, they will demonstrate excellent strength and hardness properties; however, they are often brittle in nature.

Consequently, ceramics have extensive applications in aerospace, biomedical engineering, the chemical industry, electronics, and in cutting tools.

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Ceramics are a class of inorganic materials that are made by heating and then cooling clay or mineral compounds. Traditional pottery—vases, vessels, and figurines made of earthen materials such as clay—is the earliest form of ceramics and one of the oldest human technologies.

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