For the small-batch ceramic artist, inconsistency is the ultimate frustration. You know your process matters, but with variables scattered across notebooks, photos, and memory, finding the “why” behind a glaze success or failure feels like guesswork. The solution isn’t more notes—it’s smarter analysis. By centralizing your data and leveraging accessible AI tools, you can move from asking vague questions to uncovering precise, actionable patterns.
Ask Better Questions, Get Better Answers
Stop asking, “Why are my glazes inconsistent?” Instead, formulate specific, data-driven questions that an analysis engine can tackle. For example: “Compare the successful and failed firings for my crystalline glaze. What was the average cooling rate difference between the two groups?” or “Does the thickness of application correlate with color saturation for my copper red glaze?” This shift in questioning is the first step toward true insight.
Your Data, Connected and Analyzed
Powerful analysis comes from merging disparate data streams. Imagine your AI or spreadsheet tool correlating your kiln logs (firing curve, peak temp, atmosphere) with your material database (clay body batch numbers, supplier) and your visual logs (image analysis of glaze surface). You can even enrich this with external data, like local weather history (humidity, barometric pressure) pulled from a public API, to see if atmospheric conditions play a role.
Tools like the “Explore” feature in Google Sheets or integrated AI add-ons can spot trends and create correlations across these data columns, turning your records into a dynamic analysis hub.
Your Action Plan for Smarter Practice
This Week: Start small. Pick one recurring issue and formulate a specific, data-based question. Then, run your first analysis using the “Explore” or AI query function in your data hub. Document the findings.
Ongoing Practice: Make data logging a ritual. After every firing, spend 5 minutes meticulously logging results and tagging images in your system. This habit fuels all future analysis. Crucially, always close the loop: log test results back in, noting whether they confirmed or refuted the pattern you hypothesized.
This systematic approach transforms your studio practice. You replace uncertainty with evidence, and intuition with informed strategy, ensuring each firing builds a foundation of reliable knowledge for the next.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Small-Batch Ceramic Artists & Potters: How to Automate Glaze Recipe Calculation and Batch Consistency Tracking.

