
I laid the top part of the dish up in my kiln like this:

Then put two sheets of white in the stainless steel square like this. The black sharpie X in the white sheet marks the center of the sheet so I can attempt to get the thing centered above. I laid up different chunks of blue, green and white scrap in the soap dish above the white sheets.

I fired using a slight variation in the potmelt tutorial found on Steve Immerman's site here. You can see by the picture below that it looks like I had really bad spalling from the dish. The flakes you see are the glass that did not pour out and it popped loose from the stainless soap dish while it cooled. There were tiny shards everywhere but the vacuumed up nicely with the shop vac and nothing actually stuck to the glass.

After I removed the dams and posts:
And a closeup of the final piece. I like the pattern but it looks like I have some glass that didn't like the high heat or was reactive with another color since it turned kind of muddy in parts. I still see this as a successful experiment. One other problem is the long soak at the high temp brought bubbles to the surface of the white. They are all either tiny craters or just have a super thin skin of glass. I think the next time I rent coldworking time I will sandblast this guy to pop those bubbles and refire to polish it.

Thanks for reading. Let me know what you think.
-drew-