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Glass: a learning experience

For a couple of years, on and off, I have been dabbling in glass as an art form. Mostly, I had been trying to use glass from the dump, uh, transfer station, to make giant catalpa leaf plates. I felt like I was finally making progress understanding glass when my house burned down, and I lost everything. My idea was to melt shards of recycled glass to make giant leaves which I was going to mount and then back light the leaves.

In order to do that. though, there are number of steps. First, you have to get the glass. Luckily, I don’t live far from  dump, so one evening, while the dump was closed, I went over and climbed into the bin and scooped up colors of glass I wanted. I ended up taking home one of those giant 5 gallon pails full of glass. Getting in and out of the bin was tricky, and for a minute, I was thinking it would be awfully embarrassing if I got stuck only to spend the night in the bin.

What I learned over the coming months, is that not all glass melts at the same temperature. Even bottles which have the same color may melt at different temperatures. If they melt at different temperatures, you can’t melt them together, or the piece will have cracks. Took me a while to figure out a solution to that. I ended up making melting pots, into which I could put the pieces of glass, and as they melted they would leak out onto a mold below. While I was just beginning to get to the point where I was having some success, I lost my entire studio, including all the melt pots I had made, and molds, and glass…

So, now I am in the process of rebuilding my studio. While I was in the restaurant business, over the last two years, I saved bottles with the color of glass I wanted. I just finished making another melt pot, which is in the kiln waiting to be fired. But, to make the molds for the leaves, I will have to wait until the summer, when the leaves are full grown and I can use them to make the mold form clay.

In the meantime, while I wait for summer to come, I have been trying to figure out other ways to use recycled glass to make plates and bowls. Store bought glass is so expensive, that, in order to make any money, you have to charge an inordinate amount of money.  It has the advantage of having the same melting point, so you are less likely to have cracks…but, as I am learning, nothing is fail safe! If you look on the website, you will see one dish I made from store bought glass. That dish uses about $15 worth of glass – not even counting the time to make the dish, or the timer it took to make the design, or electricity, or overhead. It is expensive.

Bortz’s house

My newest idea is to paint pictures, and then melt those pictures between layers of window glass, and then melt it into a form. Attached is a picture I painted of a house I have always loved. It is the most curiously shaped house. Located on the thoroughfare on North Haven, Maine, when I was a kid growing up, it had some great parties. It is my first attempt at this process, and using glass paints in this way. Unfortunately, I did not fire it hot enough, so it needs to go back into the kiln. I fired this to 1500 degrees fahrenheit, I think it needs to be another 100 degrees hotter. All part of the learning process! I think it is going to work, and eventually be really cool. When I was cutting the glass, I managed to break the glass which is why it has a line running through it, but I am fairly certain if I fire it to a higher temperature, it will all melt together. Today, I made a clay soap (or wedge of cheese) dish form , into which I will slump the glass. With a layer of kiln wash, the clay and glass don’t stick together, so I should be able to use the mold over and over.

Working with glass has my brain on overdrive as I think about things I want to make, and then try and figure out how to do it. Having access to clay to make molds, makes it a lot easier, but I am still learning what the glass can and not do. Wait until you see the tree I want to make!

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Pottery lessons

Looking for one of the best ways to relax? Learn to throw on a potter’s wheel! Let me show you how!

I have been throwing for more years than I care to admit.  I have gone back and forth between eathenware and stoneware, and am currently working with stoneware clay. As a clay, it is extraordinarily forgiving, and I have found, pretty easy for even beginners to make something nice.

The attached video shows me throwing an oil lamp. I first started making these in college. The inside piece you can fill with lamp oil, and around the outside, you can make a ring of oasis and add flowers and a glass chimney. It makes a stunning table centerpiece. Because I have been working with earthenware, pretty much exclusively for the last decade, I have not been able to make one of these. The oil slowly leaks from the porous earthenware clay. In college, graduation weekend, I realized I needed cash for gas to drive home. Most likely I had drunk most of my budget with days still to go. Being ever resourceful, I took my oil lamps decorated with locally picked flowers, to a local restaurant and sold them, providing enough cash to get home. What I didn’t realize, until years later, was I had filled the rings with apple blossoms, which, when I dropped them off were gorgeous…but, apple blossoms don’t last as a picked flower. I always figured that was one of those karma things that would come back to get me.

I would love to teach you how to throw. It really is a wonderful hobby, art form…Let me work with you! https://worksfromthewoods.store/product-category/classes/

 

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Made to order

 

Someone asked whether or not I could do “made to order” pieces. I am not sure about the answer to that. It is really hard to do commissioned pieces, and takes away some of the creative spontaneity of what makes doing art fun. My mother, who has always been my most ardent supporter, has asked for several necklaces for her friends. She specifies colors, and I make the necklace. If she likes it, she gets it. In that way, commission work is worth doing. Attached is a the last necklace I created for my mother.

 

Do you have favorite colors? What colors would you like to see in a handmade lampwork glass beaded necklace?

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Welcome to my new website!

Retirement! It is about time!

After about 25 years of being in and out of the restaurant business, I hope I can finally say, “DONE!” Problem is, I have said it before…

The last time I was in the business I ran a restaurant with an art theme. Located in Littleton, MA., the place was half restaurant and half gallery. The gallery featured local artists who were establishing themselves in the art world. We had some amazing artists who did fabric art, pottery, glass, painting, photography, and metal… All so very unique and wonderful. Between managing that and the restaurant, though, it seemed like an extraordinary amount of work.

It was all complicated by my house burning down in the middle of it all, and then going through the rebuilding process.

Despite a crazy year, I am happy to report that life is great! Living tucked into the mighty oak forest of central Ma with my faithful mixed breed adopted companions, Henley a mostly rat terrier and Bubba a mostly chow, I look forward to every day I can get out into my studio. I am experimenting with new media, and hope to bring some of my new work to the store soon.

Thanks for stopping in, and please stop back again.