Method of making ceramic objects by pouring slip into a mold.
A manufacturing technique in which liquid clay is poured into a vessel mold and then allowed to dry to the leather hard stage. After opening the mold, the vessel form inside can be trimmed, decorated, and fired.
A method of forming metal shapes by pouring a stabilized water suspension of metal powders into the shaped cavity of a fluid-absorbing mold, diffusing the liquid into the mold wall, removing the casting from the mold and sintering.
Casting of pots in hollow moulds using liquid clay.
A reproductive process of forming clay objects by pouring clay slip into a hollow plaster mold and allowing it to remain long enough for a layer of clay to thicken on the mold wall. After hardening, the clay has shrunk and the object can be removed from the mold easily. Slips formulated for casting usually contain sodium carbonate or sodium silicate which function as deflocculants. Plaster molds used with slips which contain these deflocculants tend to disintegrate because of the sodium.
a technique used in ceramics to produce a number of identical objects. slip (thinned clay) is poured into a mold (usually plaster) to create the desired form. this technique is most commonly used for faience and porcelain ware. also known as casting.
In ceramics, a pouring slip, a water suspension of finely ground clay, into a plaster of Paris mold. After it hardens it is dried and fired.