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Glass Animals (lampwork)

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Leni:
I've got a home made glass animal!   :D 
It's a little lampwork 'Dragon' which my husband made in the kitchen!   
I don't think it's got the right number of legs, or eyes, or that it looks much like a dragon (which he assured me it was!) but it was a real labour of lurve, and I treasure it    :o  ;)  http://tinypic.com/2d73ev  <--- Mod: Link dead
OK, OK, I'm sorry, I'll go!   ::)

Leni   ;D

chopin-liszt:
:D Leni, Nothing can beat a labour of lurve!

 Adam, having worked in labs, the biggest flask I used was 5 litres! 200 sounds totally unwieldy! (Sorry, got 'flu, feeling rotten).
I have to confess a love of the volumetric flask shape, and have a few art glass bottles in that shape, of varying quality. (I keep them in the kitchen, my current "lab").  Shall post some pictures, sometime soon.
I had a 2litre flask size, in a lovely olivey green, I think it might have been Galaskruf, but my other half dropped a copper lobster bottle opener on it. Sigh :cry:

At an antiquey fair in Perth, a couple of years ago, I met David Smith, who had spent 23 years as head lampworker at Perthshire Paperweights, but following their closure, was trying to make ends meet, having opened his own workshop in Perth, making lovely little glass birds and animals, very detailed. I don't know what he's doing now, I still have his details .
The birds and animals were beautiful (but I have to confess, I was not taken with the stained agate plinths, just one of my no-no's)
Cheers, Sue.

Leni:
Some of the nicest lampwork I have seen (outside of a paperweight) is by David and Wendy Pryce-Jones of The Glassblobbery - http://www.glassblobbery.com  David is the flame-worker and Wendy is a glass-stainer.  The irridescent colours in their work are fantastic!   :shock:

I have two pieces by them, but one is badly broken  :cry:  (cats  :evil: ) and even the other, shown here: http://tinypic.com/2d7vjc <--- Mod: Link dead has had a reed broken off (cats again  :roll: ) which I am waiting for a sunny day to glue. 

Still beautiful in spite of the damage, IMHO ( see thread on chips, etc.  :wink: )

Leni

Frank:
I like the name Glassblobbery. Reminds more of my recent laymens post on glassmaking using blobs :lol: Sadly, they do not accept cash payments over £10,000   :'(

A Pirelli Kanagaroo just sold on eBay with a retail price ticket of 17 bob about  1.20 in real money. Not much today but quite expensive in the 50's to 60's when it was sold. Presumably the lampworker would have received 20%-40% of that per piece so quite lucrative. By contrast Lausch's web shop offer most of their lampwork in the range o 5 - 20 a piece and style is not wildly different from Pirelli. The blobbery work is very elaborate by comparison and their price range is £7 - £65 (10-90).

I find it fascinating that so much energy is invested in this area by glassmakers and collectors but until now has been hardly mentioned in these forums. My original teasing thread title (time to come out) was designed to encourage people to admit to owning these and as so many responded I changed it to a more sedate title.

A lot of 50's lampwork on eBay is Japanese so it would seem to be quite a large global sub-industry... with the advantage of needing minimal equipment. The Russians and Chinese are also making a lot now.

Adam:
Sue - The 200 litre flask was part of industrial chemical plant, not for use in a lab!!  The blower himself found it a bit unwieldy - rather a stagger to the mould!

Adam D.

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