A special thanks to the following vendors who donated to previous Raku Night Fund Raisers.
Our Address:
KC Clay Guild
200 West 74th Street
Kansas City, MO 64114
Click here for a map
Phone:
(816)-363-1373
Guild Hours:
MON - THU 10am to 9pm
FRI - SAT 10am to 10pm
SUN 1pm to 5pm
Note: The KC Clay Guild is a volunteer run organization. Feel free to call ahead to make sure there will be a monitor on duty. Our monitors are reliable, however; in the unfortunate case there can't be a monitor on duty, the KC Clay Guild will be closed. (816) 363-1373
Family Fun Nights
FRI and SAT 6pm to 10pm
FREE studio time for members!
Only $5.00 for Non-Members
Come to the KC Clay Guild's Raku Night and take part in the fun and amazing process of Raku! We block the street off between 73rd Street and 74th Street on Wyandotte and label it 'The Raku Zone'. The KC Clay Guild sets up the raku kilns, reduction cans, and glaze booths outside so you can see, step by step, the raku firing proccess.
Saturday May 8th, 2010
4:30pm to 10:00pm
First pot goes in at 5:00pm
Last pot goes in at 9:00pm
At the KC Clay Guild (Click for map)
Tickets will be available at the door the day of the event!


Raku: (Western Style) Rakuyaki, or Raku, is a Japanese firing process. A bisque piece is glazed with special raku glazes. It is fired in a small gas kiln with a removable top. When the piece reaches maturity the top is removed and the glowing white hot piece is moved via long tongs to a trashcan full of combustibles. ie. newspaper, sawdust, banana peals, leaves, bark... so on. The stuff inside the trash can instantly bursts into flames and then the lid is put on the can and the piece sits in the smoldering, smoking can. This causes the glaze to change colors unevenly giving it a flash of colors. The unglazed areas absorb this smoke/carbon and are turned black. White crackle glazes absorb the carbon into the cracks making them visible. After the pieces are cooled they are removed and gently scrubbed to reveal all the colors!
Please Note: Raku pieces are not food safe. Keep them out of direct sunlight because the colors will fade. They are not water tight and should not be used for planting.








