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How does she do that??
Once upon a time there was a little girl who used to go with her mom to
art shows, ask for $5., and buy melted, stretched out pop bottles that
were sold for tacky ash trays. She also collected all sorts of flashy
jewelry from cheap rings out of vending machines to antique rhinestone
necklaces. Somewhere it was destined that these events would be tied together.
My current style emerged when I blew up a pop bottle in my kiln while
trying to reproduce those stretched out tacky ash trays. All the pieces
had melted into little blobs and sat there looking like jewels. It was
as if I had stumbled into Ali Baba's cave.
It took a lot of experimenting and screwing up..some of the "mistakes",
of course led to the greatest discoveries. I have a series of "measuring
tools" I use to determine the consistency of the glass,(screens,
old flour sifters, etc...all pretty low-tech) "They" (you know
the "they" that make the rules of everything) speak of glass
compatibility, and they are right when it comes to fusing, but I have
found that at a certain temperature(1800-2000 degrees), EVERYTHING becomes
compatible
So it starts with the smashing of the bottles and the plates (and whatever
else glass-wise comes down the pike). Some colors will stay consistent
when fired, other colors change greatly, so I have my charts of things
like "2 tsp. of 7-up bottles and 1 tsp. of Aquafina water bottle".
For the SEAGLASS grouping, I smash the glass very fine (so it goes through
my smallest screen). I sprinkle the frit into the molds and fire the kiln
at about 1900 degrees. When the glass has cooled, I remove the stones
from the mold and tumble them to remove any traces of mold investment.
Then I soak the stones in a hydrofluoric solution to etch a matte finish
into the surface. The stones get tumbled again to remove residue. Then
a fine layer of gold foil (or silver depending on the stone color) is
adhered to the back of the stone. This foil is the secret of the light
reflecting back through the stone. Without the foil, the stone would look
dull when set in a closed back setting. The foil gives the effect of the
stone "lighting up from the inside".
Carnivale Glass is formed by a process of fusing a layer of fine gold
particles onto the surface of the glass. The particles are suspended in
a liquid that is sprayed onto the surface and then burned off in the firing
process. The process is called fuming. Carnivale glass was given away
in the 1940's and 50's as a prize at the carnival sideshows. It was considered
cheap and flashy. Dinnerware made from carnival glass was given away as
bonuses inside boxes of detergent. These days, orginal carnival glass
in mint condition is highly prized. I work with broken pieces. The glass
is similar to dichroic in the way it refracts light (sort of like the
reflection of colors on the top of an oil slick). I work this glass at
a lower temperature, just enough to slump it, yet not enough to damage
the surface treatment. (about 1600 degrees)
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