Sunday, 4 March 2012

When I visited Creative Glass in Bristol, I purchased quite a selection of glass, not really sure what I would need. This included scrap glass, as it is less expensive and the small pieces are large enough to make jewellery. I wish I’d photographed my goodies now! There was also a selection of dichroics to get me started.

So, now time to have a go with dichroic glass. Dichroic glass has more than one coating, refracting and reflecting light depending on how it is viewed. I think it is quite beautiful and the first experience I had with firing was with this on a day course with Fired Up Jewellery

On the day course, we followed a simple process; layer of clear, layer of dichroic, layer of clear, so I started with that.

Cutting obviously takes practice. As does drawing a straight line! The scoring doesn’t seem to be a problem, but straight lines definitely are! Also, I didn’t get a pair of running pliers and I feel that’s was mistake (one I put right but more of that later).

I find it very relaxing, cutting and placing the pieces together. On this firing, I was just practicing; seeing how things came out and hoping that it was as simple as I’d remembered. Judging by the results, it was. I used a slightly different firing schedule this time, using a medium fuse, meaning it takes a little longer to heat up. You can see from the coaster with the cross that the cutting needs refinement, but overall, a good start


I did have a bit of a hiccup; set the kiln up, went out the next day to find everything exactly as it was when I put it in! This happened a couple more times until I worked out the cause; I wasn’t pulling the lock on, so the kiln timed out and didn’t run. You live and learn!

Friday, 2 March 2012

The first firing...

So, I have the kiln, but no glass! The kiln arrived earlier than expected and I had decided to visit Warm Glass rather than mail order it. The shop only opens weekdays and as I work in a college, the only time I can visit is in the holiday, so the timing wasn’t great.

Back to the book for advice. Now, glass that is going to be fused together has to have the same coefficient of expansion. In other words, when it gets hot, it all has to heat up and expand at the same rate or it makes the glass unstable. In general, it’s best to use the same make as well, so I decided on Bullseye. No particular reason for the choice!

Never having been blessed with patience, I dragged husband to Creative Glass. I wandered around helplessly for about ½ an hour and then decided to ask for help. Great advice from these guys as well, I came away with a variety of glass, a glass cutter, stringers (long spaghetti shaped pieces of glass in different colours), confetti (very thin glass pieces in different colours) and some copper sheet.

Prepare the kiln – the shelf and kiln base must be protected to stop the glass from sticking to them. The kiln wash supplied with the kiln came as a powder and when mixed with water, looks like kaolin; it needed 4 coats, allowing it to dry between coats. This seemed to take forever!

Then a pre-fire just to make sure the shelf is dry. Excitement! I follow the instructions to the letter and fire the kiln to 500°. It works!

So now to test the kiln. The book says to try coasters and I bought some pre-cut 4” squares to start with. I started simple; well, I wasn’t sure it was going to work (I have very little faith in myself) I set the kiln to the basic setting - another reason for selecting this kiln is it has an idiot-proof setting that you can start with.

And this was the result!

Before & after


Not too shabby! There did seem to be lots of bubbles; I emailed the very helpful people at Warm Glass and they said there could be a couple of reasons:
· Temperature raised too rapidly
· The stringers and confetti trap the air
Now, I had used the fast programme, so that’s something to change next time!

Thursday, 1 March 2012

A new era!



So, how long has it been since I blogged? Mmmm…….! No doubt anyone that was following me has long given up on me!

Been thinking though and have decided to start again. Maybe just once a week; reckon that’s do-able. The main prompt for the decision has been the start of a new (to me hobby) – glass fusing. It’s been nigh-on impossible to find useful information on the web (or perhaps I’m just not looking in the right places!) and so I thought I could share my learning curve with the blogosphere. Hopefully, someone may be able to steer me in the right direction!

A couple of years ago I bought a day’s tuition for a very good friend for her birthday. We cut dichroic glass and put the pieces together and left them with the tutor to fire in her kiln. Once the
pendants arrived, I was hooked. My family will testify to the hankering! ‘What do you want for Mother’s Day/Birthday/Christmas’ all received the same response – a kiln! Then I did a PMC course with Chris Pate, which made me even more determined to purchase a kiln.

But - not an easy purchase; it costs a little more than a metre or two of fabric and needs
more space!

So, first of all – what size? Plan A was to make jewellery, so I didn’t need a large one. Now,
I take after my Dad; if you’re going to take up a new hobby, you read a book (or several) on it. The recommended title was Contemporary Fused Glass by Brad Walker. Whilst barely understanding the content at the time (it is a fab book, though and is often referred to), it did open my eyes to the possibilities. So, I didn’t want to make the mistake of getting one that I would grow out of.

Now, if you didn’t know before, I’ll bet you can guess that these things don’t come cheap. Or easy.
Or even with much information. I quickly established:

1. A kiln for glass is not necessarily the same as one for ceramics
2. They cost less to run than you think
3. Timing and temperature control is everything
4. I didn’t know nearly enough to buy one without help
5. It would be great if the help was relatively local

I checked out ebay and discovered that people do not do their homework when purchasing a ‘bargain’. Some of the kilns I looked at could be purchased new for the price a second hand one was going on ebay. No customer support, either!

So, for me, it came down to a choice of 2 – the Paragon SC2 and the Skutt Hotstart Pro. I
had some really helpful advice from Warm Glass (they must have been really fed up of me by the time I’d finished!) near Bristol and the choice was – Hotstart. So here she is.