A ceramics experiment: We have a glaze in the studio that's known as a carbon trap type glaze because it has the ability to trap soot from the firing within itself, leaving interesting black patterns and blemishes on the finished piece (this is not the same a raku).

I don't know why we have that glaze, because the way they fire the kin, it never gets sooty. I manually added soot to these pieces with a candle to see if it gets trapped in the glaze and survives the firing.

It may not. If the kiln is too oxidizing at any point, the soot will burn off. We'll see!

Carbon trap glazes can do interesting things like this

Edit: These are not my pieces. These are examples i found

@MLE_online those are gorgeous! =O
@interzoneboy they are. they're not mine though!
@MLE_online those are great 👍
@MLE_online These are lovely! Hoping yours turn out interesting too!
@MLE_online that moon really wants a little plant in it
@ferrix it does. The glaze won't look like that once it's fired and it melts, but the way it looked made me want to make solution that does look like a moon
@MLE_online it might not look like Luna but maybe it's exactly like some other moon :)