Glass Working (Fusing and Lampworking)
Posted: July 21st, 2007, 11:53 pm
I think I posted something about lampworking before, somewhere. I don't see it here though..
Anyways. I'm back to living with the people who do all sorts of art thingies, so I'm back into my glass work. Only now it's summer, so I can't do lampworking. They've taught me something called glass fusing; which skips the torch and goes straight to the kiln.
This is lampworking;
See, you have a stick with clay and put glass on it.
For fusing it's much simpler. All you do is cut and glue pieces of glass together and put it in, letting it melt together. Most people make simple necklaces that are shiny, but my friend is really good with it. I'll take a few pictures of his work after it's put through the kiln.
For now though I have a pre-cooked shot of my first thing. It's a duck with horns.
It's for a friend who didn't get the birthday present I made for him because the mail sucks.
I can't wait to see how it comes out cooked.
_______________________________________
Ok, well, there was a bit of a mistake. See, different types of glass cool at different speeds, so if one cools faster than another and they're stuck together they crack. I knew that. But I didn't know that the glass I used wasn't properly sorted. Bah.
So there are a few cracks around the orange pieces, you can bairly make them out in the pictures. It's one piece now, but it'll shatter sooner or later.
I'll just redo the design later.
Anyways. I'm back to living with the people who do all sorts of art thingies, so I'm back into my glass work. Only now it's summer, so I can't do lampworking. They've taught me something called glass fusing; which skips the torch and goes straight to the kiln.
This is lampworking;
See, you have a stick with clay and put glass on it.
For fusing it's much simpler. All you do is cut and glue pieces of glass together and put it in, letting it melt together. Most people make simple necklaces that are shiny, but my friend is really good with it. I'll take a few pictures of his work after it's put through the kiln.
For now though I have a pre-cooked shot of my first thing. It's a duck with horns.
It's for a friend who didn't get the birthday present I made for him because the mail sucks.
I can't wait to see how it comes out cooked.
_______________________________________
Ok, well, there was a bit of a mistake. See, different types of glass cool at different speeds, so if one cools faster than another and they're stuck together they crack. I knew that. But I didn't know that the glass I used wasn't properly sorted. Bah.
So there are a few cracks around the orange pieces, you can bairly make them out in the pictures. It's one piece now, but it'll shatter sooner or later.
I'll just redo the design later.