Archive for December, 2009

stained glass painting patterns – How to Do Camouflage Paint Patterns

Camouflage paint patterns are used for concealing solders and their equipment from being detected by the enemy, making them appear to be part and parcel of the natural environmental conditions surrounding them. This type of concealment is also used by duck hunters. The extent to which you can camouflage will only be limited by your imagination. Different items are used for these purpose but the Read the rest of this entry

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patterns for stained glass – YouTube – Stained Glass



Ok so you might find the next few links interesting. These are from around the web, just random snippets that I've picked up in my reading, but I found some very cool information in them. You might too. Here goes...

Holiday events

Quality handmade clothing and accessories, folk art, jewelry, stained glass, metal art, fabric art. Vendors wanted. No fee, no shop time, ... Read More...

Studio art tour and sale covers the spectrum

Artist, Michael Kenney (wood turner and wood crafts, stained glass and pottery) 16. 285 Bent Creek Drive. Artist, Linda Stephens (bead art, beaded necklaces ... Read More...

TV Review: HBO's 'Terror In Mumbai' (Six Stars out of Five)

... lives and destroying the lives of families, they are virtually oohing and ahhing over the hotel's opulence (stained glass windows! all those computers! ... Read More...
That's all the news for today guys, so until next time, thanks for stopping by.

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Tiffany lamps were originally made by Louis Comfort Tiffany who was a painter working in the 19th century. He was admitted to the National Academy when he was 23 and was the youngest ever member. He started working with coloured glass in the 1870's and made many stained glass windows for churches, often using flowers and plants in his designs.

Following on from this he teamed up with two other artist to found Louis Comfort Tiffany and Associated American Artists, a company specialising in glass windows, a prime example of which can be seen in the White House. The company was dissolved in 1885 and he started the Tiffany Glass Company, alone this time. This later became the Tiffany Studios which made Tiffany lamps until the beginning of the 1930's.

When Thomas Edison invented the light bulb in 1879 he was inspired to make glass lampshades, drawing on his experience with stained glass windows and incorporating the flower and plant designs he had used for them. He also used the same methods as he had used for the windows, making paper patterns of the design and using these to cut the glass pieces, edging the pieces with copper foil and soldering them together to construct the lampshades. He patented the Nautilus lampshade, a shell shaped design, and included this when he staged his first exhibition in 1899.

Today Tiffany lamps and lampshades are still made to Tiffany's traditional methods. The lampshades are made from many pieces of coloured stained glass soldered together to make designs which include flowers, dragonflies, butterflies and also more abstract designs.

The traditional method takes many hours of careful work. First a wooden model of the required tiffany lampshade is carved, covered in glue, and paper or linen is laid over it. The design is then drawn on the paper/linen, the lines representing each small piece of coloured glass which will create the design, notation is added to specify the colour of each piece.

When the design is completed the paper/linen is taken off the model and cut along selected lines so it lays flat and becomes a two dimensional pattern. Each area is numbered to identify it, the design traced onto another piece of paper as a reference for later assembly of the lampshade, then the original is cut into all the separate pieces, which are used to cut the small pieces of coloured glass.

The design is then built up by applying adhesive wax to the wooden model and pressing each glass piece into it, following the reference plan. When the whole lampshade is assembled the glass pieces are removed individually, edged with copper foil and soldered back in place. The whole thing is then heated to melt the wax and allow the lampshade to be removed and the inner edges to be soldered. If required by the design metal trims are soldered to the to and/or bottom edges, before the lampshade is attached to a metal (often bronze) base.

Tiffany lamps are wonderful as accent pieces in a home, adding an elegance often lacking in modern designs. The jewel coloured stained glass throws brilliant shards of light onto walls and ceilings, and a Tiffany lamp will transform a dark corner into something magical.

For more articles on Tiffany Lamps and some great deals on lamps visit us at Tiffany Lamps

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Ok so 3 more posts today that I've dug up - I'm an information JUNKIE on this stuff lately. Give em a browse and let me know what ya reckon. They're just from a few different sites I've been surfing lately that are generally good for information like this...

Treasures: Glass bowl's 'peacock and urn' design offers clues to its origin

There are almost 200 recorded custard glass patterns, but Read the rest of this entry

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Stained Glass Floor Lamps: Bring Colorful Light Into Your Home!

People have been incorporating stained glass into home décor since the 11th century, when this colorful variation on the standard glass making procedure began to flourish as an art form. Glass was typically colored by adding metallic oxides to the glass while it was still in molten form. Copper oxides were added to produce Read the rest of this entry

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