You should not put glaze on the bottom of a clay pot where it will come into direct contact with surfaces when placed down for firing. The glaze could cause the pot to stick to the kiln shelf during firing and result in damage to both the pot and the kiln.
the best way to get off a small bit of glaze off the base of a pot (like small bits from a kiln shelf) is to use a carborundum/sharpening stone and slowly grind it down
Captain Scott died on the Ross Ice Shelf, 11 miles from One Ton Depot.
Yes, as long as the glazes are meant to be fired to the same cone. Putting a cone 6 and a cone 10 glaze on the same pot would not be a good idea. But putting two, three, four, etc. glazes of the same cone on one pot is perfectly fine. Just understand that glazes may be stable by themselves, but when another glaze is added on top that may create instabilities such as crazing or running. The biggest problem I have had with combining glazes on one pot is running. Just make sure to put the pot on stilts or on a waste slab so you don't have to grind glaze off the kiln shelf.
Shelf.
you go to the book room then you go to the book shelf and read THE JOURNAL OF CAPTAIN ROCKHOPPER at the end of the book is the key
Captain James Cook discovered Marine life between 1772 and 1775. Also, Captain James Clark Ross explored the Ross sea, discovering the Ross ice shelf, Ross island and Victoria land.
Captain Scott didn't 'make it home': he died on his return trek from the South Pole on the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica.
The shelf in a hatch back is a partial shelf. A parcel is a package.
shelf
Captain Robert Falcon Scott died on his return journey from the South Pole along with four of his companions in 1912. They perished from a combination of extreme cold, exhaustion, and starvation in Antarctica. Scott's final camp, known as "The Terra Nova Expedition," is located near the Ross Ice Shelf.
He and the others died around the 29th March 1912, on the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica, only 11 miles from his resupply at One Ton Depot.