
Potash
Potash Clay is an important raw material for the ceramic industry. It is also used as a soil conditioner and a fertilizer. Potash Clay is often used in the production of porcelain because it can be mixed with more common clays to create a hard, translucent white material. Potash Clay can be used to produce porcelain, porcelain enamel, glazes, and glaze enamels.
The clay is mined from the ground and dried to create a very fine clay. The clay is white in color and can be used for all sorts of things including ceramic glazes, pottery, and even gardening. Potash Clay is an excellent product for creating anything from the classic ceramic vase to a garden pot.
Quartz
Our commitment lies in delivering customers the highest quality quartz available. Our dedication to meticulous quality testing and a careful selection process for sourcing exquisite quartz sets us apart from the competition. Quartz, a versatile material with applications ranging from commercial to residential and artificial use, is available in various colors and grades. We ensure its extraction adheres to strict safety and environmental standards.


Calcium Carbonate Powder
Calcium carbonate, a ubiquitous compound found abundantly in nature, plays a pivotal role in various industries and biological processes. Composed primarily of calcium, carbon, and oxygen atoms, calcium carbonate exists in different forms such as limestone, marble, and chalk. Its presence and applications span a wide spectrum, making it a fundamental substance with diverse functions. calcium carbonate is a major component of rocks like limestone and marble, contributing to the formation of landscapes and geological structures.
Soda Feldspar
Soda is the second most abundant mineral on earth after feldspar and is usually found in granites, pegmatites, sandstone, and other igneous rocks. Soda usually makes semi-precious gemstones. Alpha Soda is the most common Soda which gets converted into beta Soda at 573 °C.
Soda is hard, chemically inert, has a high melting point, and is highly resistant to weathering, making Soda ideal for application in foundries and filtration systems. Its
clarity remains in high demand in the glass and ceramic industry and many other daily-use products.


Yellow Ochre
Yellow Ochre is a mineral that gets its natural yellow color from Limonite, a mixture of goethite, akageneite, lepidocrocite, and jarosite. Yellow Ochre is prepared by washing and separating the mineral from the sand and other impurities. The resultant sludge is then dried, and the pigment is ground. The primary color which gives a component to natural yellow ochre( ochre, yellow earth) is limonite – not a particular mineral but a combination of various iron-restraining minerals along with goethite, aragonite, lepidocrocite, and jarosite.
Iron oxides are fixed at elevated temperatures but not impenetrable in the case of acids. The pigment is appropriately fixed as is registered by the cave paintings until now in the same condition after many decades. Yellow Ochre is well suited with all other pigments and is frequently used in blending along with other paints.
Limestone
