A Metal Drum as a Kiln
Barrel firing uses a steel barrel (the kind originally designed for oil or chemicals) as a contained firing chamber. The process and surface effects are very similar to pit firing, but the enclosed barrel gives slightly more control over the atmosphere and is easier to set up in urban and suburban environments where digging a pit may not be practical.
Setting Up a Barrel Firing
- Use a 200-litre steel drum with the lid removed or a series of holes punched around the base for airflow.
- Layer combustibles in the bottom: newspaper, wood shavings, straw.
- Place pieces in the barrel, packing organic colourants against them.
- Add layers of combustibles between each layer of pots.
- Top with larger pieces of wood or charcoal.
- Light from the bottom and allow to burn.
Colourants to Experiment With
- Copper carbonate or wire: Greens, turquoise, pink
- Ferric oxide wash: Reds and blacks
- Banana peels: Warm amber and black from the potassium
- Seaweed or kelp: Orange and brown
- Table salt: White halos and bright highlights
- Steel wool: Orange-rust tones from oxidising iron
Managing Expectations
Pit and barrel firing are inherently unpredictable. No two firings produce the same results, and no two pieces from the same firing look alike. This unpredictability is the point: it is the fire making decisions, not the potter. The best approach is to prepare thoughtfully, pack colourants with intention, and then let go.
Go Deeper
The philosophy of embracing unpredictability in barrel and pit firing resonates with the Japanese aesthetic of wabi-sabi, which finds beauty in imperfection and the marks of natural process. The use of copper, iron, and salt as colourants in these firings connects to the same chemistry that drives colour development in raku ware and other atmospheric firing techniques.
Barrel Firing Troubleshooting
Effects are too faint Increase local contact between colourants and clay, and add a bit more fuel around each piece.
Everything is over-blackened You likely had too much reduction and smoke retention. Increase airflow or shorten smothering time.
Uneven maturity Stacking may be too dense. Improve spacing so heat can circulate through the full barrel height.
Pro Tip
Standardise your loading map with numbered shelf levels or rings. Repeatability comes from consistent placement, not from trying to predict the fire.