@Mark-S
Test it with tea, maybe it will be a good tea pitcher. Some people use 2 pots per session, one for brewing and one for serving.
@Mark-S
Just use grey JB marine, no need to add wheat flour. You can use craft clay to make a simple temporary mold for shaping. Fine tune w/ sanding after epoxy is cured.Mark-S wrote: ↑Fri May 28, 2021 4:51 amBok Don't you think that JB Weld would work? It's not that easy... but I think I could do this with some practice. A repair with brass/silver/gold would be very expensive and I couldn't do this myself.
I'd mix JB Weld (transparent) with wheat flour to fill the gaps and later apply another layer with JB Weld and golden food coloring. But I would try this first with trashy pots.![]()
Thanks for the adviceChadrinkincat wrote: ↑Fri May 28, 2021 8:23 amJust use grey JB marine, no need to add wheat flour. You can use craft clay to make a simple temporary mold for shaping. Fine tune w/ sanding after epoxy is cured.
From my perspective, fixing it with glue would just ruin the pot. I'd rather keep it with the chips so it can be fixed properly in the future. More generally, if there's a broken pot for sale and I think it is too expensive to fix it properly, either I'm happy with how it is for study purposes, or I'd rather wait for one in better condition. Better to have 10 good pots than 50 pots that all have some problem or other...Mark-S wrote: ↑Fri May 28, 2021 4:51 amBok Don't you think that JB Weld would work? It's not that easy... but I think I could do this with some practice. A repair with brass/silver/gold would be very expensive and I couldn't do this myself.
I'd mix JB Weld (transparent) with wheat flour to fill the gaps and later apply another layer with JB Weld and golden food coloring. But I would try this first with trashy pots.![]()
I really like the look of Kintsugi and it's awesome if this is done traditionally. But what's wrong with it if you can replicate this look with JB Weld (much more stable, inexpensive and easier to do it yourself... also non-toxic according to the manufacturer).steanze wrote: ↑Fri May 28, 2021 9:48 amFrom my perspective, fixing it with glue would just ruin the pot. I'd rather keep it with the chips so it can be fixed properly in the future. More generally, if there's a broken pot for sale and I think it is too expensive to fix it properly, either I'm happy with how it is for study purposes, or I'd rather wait for one in better condition. Better to have 10 good pots than 50 pots that all have some problem or other...
With common I mean you see this shape a lot in auctions (not: common = cheap). I don't know the prices of F1 pots in China.
The reason you see them often in auctions is because the real ones are rare and command high prices, so they are commonly faked and the fakes become a common sight. Not affordable for commoners - if they are authentic
I doubt you can replicate the same look, JB weld cures much faster and you might not be able to remove excess with turpentine as one can do with urushi. In addition, there is an aesthetic aspect to using traditional methods, much like there is an aesthetic aspect to using old teapots even if they may have some more imperfections than a newly made pot. These are just my personal preferences though, not a general ruleMark-S wrote: ↑Fri May 28, 2021 10:20 amI really like the look of Kintsugi and it's awesome if this is done traditionally. But what's wrong with it if you can replicate this look with JB Weld (much more stable, inexpensive and easier to do it yourself... also non-toxic according to the manufacturer).
I agree, I would not pay those amounts for that pot either, but I would not pay even $50 to buy one that's fixed with glue. Assuming you paid $50-100 for this damage one, you could get a kintsugi kit from Japan for about $100 (there are also low-allergenic ones) and fix the lid well. Plus you can use the kit to fix several pieces.Mark-S wrote: ↑Fri May 28, 2021 10:20 amThe same shape is for sale on ZAG for $400 (with minor chips) and on eBay for about $1200 $1000 (perfect condition) if I remember correctly. That's much more than I am willing to pay for a pretty common F1 shape.
Edit:
ZAG: http://zishaartgallery.com/product/%e5% ... %e5%a3%b6/
eBay: https://www.ebay.com/itm/284150516558