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Lampwork

Webpages concerning "Lampwork"

Artist made lampwork beads and carefully selected accessory beads and supplies, perfect for your jewelry making needs.
http://www.enchantingbeads.com/
Keywords:
lampwork, bead, glass bead, wholesale lampwork, handmade beads, artist beads, sterling silver beads, lampwork spacer, bead sets, lampworking, lampworked, bali silver, bali beads, silver beads, beading supplies, silver

http://www.enchantingbeads.com/

Fine, handmade lampwork glass beads by artist Josephine Brooks. Whimsical sculptural beads as well as traditional designs.
http://www.lampworkart.com/
Keywords:
handcrafted, artist, handmade, lampwork, glass, beads, kiln annealed, specials, catalog

http://www.lampworkart.com/

Lampwork glass beads, buttons, marbles, and cabochons handcrafted by the artist, Mavis Smith.
http://www.mavissmith.com/
Keywords:
lampwork beads, buttons, cabochons, marbles, glass beads, lampwork bead, beads, handmade beads, lampwork beads, lampwork focal beads, holiday beads, necklaces, bracelets, earrings, lampworking, mavissmith, Mavis Smith, jewelry, art glass, sculptural glass, dichroic, mermaids, fairies

http://www.mavissmith.com/

The individually handcrafted art glass beads of Dragon Jools - Dwyn Tomlinson
http://www.dragonjools.com
Keywords:
lampwork beads, dragon jools, dragon jewels, flamework, wave beads

http://www.dragonjools.com

Kimberly Scott, Glass Bead Artist specializing in Handmade Glass Beads and Art.
http://www.heavenlyfire.com/
Keywords:
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http://www.heavenlyfire.com/

Lisa's Pieces: Handmade Lampwork Glass Bead Jewelry, Dog Bead Jewelry, Cat Bead Jewelry! Glass Bead Bracelets, Earrings and Necklaces. Puppy Purses!
http://www.lisaspieces.com/
Keywords:
: glass beads, glass jewelry, dog beads, dog jewelry, cat beads, cat jewelry, lampwork beads, bracelets, earrings, necklaces, lampwork bracelets, lampwork earrings, puppy purses, dog purses, faux fur purses, pewter cat earrings, pewter, handmade, beeds, braclets, maltese, Labrador, Czech, animal, one, of, a, kind, exquisite, jewlry, glass

http://www.lisaspieces.com/

Handmade Lampwork Glass Beads made on Vancouver Island,BC,Canada. Original beads, bead sets, bracelets, and necklaces made of Italian Moretti glass.
http://www.seasidebeads.com/
Keywords:
Lampwork glass beads, glass beads, beads, jewellery, jewelery, jewelry, handmade jewelry, handcrafted jewelry, lampwork jewelry, beading, bead jewelry, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, BC, Canada

http://www.seasidebeads.com/

Mary Ann Williams specializes in intricately designed and handcrafted borosilicate lampwork beads, lampwork beads from other types of glass, and jewelry incorporating the beads and silver. Browse the shopping pages for unique, one of a kind lampwork bead focals and bead sets as well as a selection of jewelry findings including sterling silver.
http://www.thebeads.com/
Keywords:
lampwork beads, handcrafted beads, handcrafted jewelry, silver jewelry, glass beads, borosilicate

http://www.thebeads.com/

Find stunning glass beads handmade by this talented artist. Incredible, wearable beauty in glass sculpture!
http://www.mjlampwork.com/
Keywords:
beads, lampwork, glass, glass beads, lampworked, artist beads, Illinois artist, wholesale, jewelry, supplies, designer, teacher, wearable art, Italian glass, glass sculpture, Venetian glass

http://www.mjlampwork.com/

Hand made glass beads, known as lampwork beads, created by Micheale Gordon of Glassfyrefly Studios
http://glassfyreflystudios.com/
Keywords:
handmade glass beads, hand, made, glass, beads, lampwork beads, micheale gordon, artist made beads, glassfyrefly studios, glassfyrefly, glassfirefly, glassfyrefly.com, HANDMADE GLASS BEADS

http://glassfyreflystudios.com/

Lampwork glass beads made by artists Amy and Thom Crider in their studio in Austin, Texas. Artistic and collectable handmade glass beads.
http://www.lampworkglass.com/
Keywords:
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http://www.lampworkglass.com/

SerenasBeadery.com offers beautifully crafted handmade lampwork beads.
http://serenasbeadery.com/
Keywords:
beads, lampwork beads, serena's beadery

http://serenasbeadery.com/

http://www.fdferrisbeads.bigstep.com/
Keywords:
lampwork, sculptural, beads, jewelry, earrings, marbles, paperweights, custom

http://www.fdferrisbeads.bigstep.com/

http://hometown.aol.com/fireddesires/openingpage.html
Keywords:
Easy Designer, Cool Home Pages, AOL Hometown

http://hometown.aol.com/fireddesires/openingpage.html

http://www.foxhillsdesigns.com/

http://www.foxhillsdesigns.com/

http://www.leahfairbanks.com/
Keywords:
beads, lampworking, Leah, Fairbanks, Leah Fairbanks, Pearls, Dichroic glass, glass beads, Willits, teaching, Floral beads, flowers, gardens of glass

http://www.leahfairbanks.com/

The Earring Cafe - Amanda Glanville - one of fewer than 50 Glass Bead Makers in the UK.
http://www.earringcafe.co.uk
Keywords:
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http://www.earringcafe.co.uk

http://www.marysbeads.com/

http://www.marysbeads.com/

http://www.ghostcow.com/

http://www.ghostcow.com/

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Wikipedia-Article "Lampwork"

Lampworking is glassworking using a torch to melt and shape the glass. It is also known as Flameworking or Torchworking, as the modern practice no longer uses oil fuled lamps. Although the art form has been practiced since ancient times, it flowered in Murano, Italy in the 1300s, and spread from there to the rest of Europe.

Some well-known lampworkers include Roger Parramore, sometimes called "the human lathe" due to his peerless ability to create smoothly turned vessels, Bandhu Scott Dunham, author of several lampworking textbooks and artistic compilations, and Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka, who created sea-life and botanic models in glass for Harvard.

In addition to artwork, lampworking is used to create scientific tools, particularly for chemistry.

Early lampworking was done in the flame of an oil lamp, with the artist blowing air into the flame through a pipe. Most artists today use torches that burn either propane or natural gas for the fuel gas, with either air or pure oxygen as the oxidizer.

Lampworking can be done with many types of glass, but the most common are soda-lime glass, sometimes called "soft glass", or Moretti after an early Italian manufacturer; and borosilicate glass, particularly Pyrex. Leaded glass tubing was commonly used in the manufacture of neon signs, although its use has been fading due to environmental concerns and health risks.

Different colors of glass must be carefully selected for compatibility with each other, both chemically and in terms of coefficient of thermal expansion (COE). Glass with incompatible COE, mixed together, can create powerful stresses within a finished piece as it cools, cracking or even violently shattering the piece. Different major types of glass, e.g., borosilicate and Moretti, are not compatible with each other. Chemically, some colors can react with each other when melted together, usually causing undesirable effects such as discoloration, bubbling, or devitrification.

Borosilicate glass is considered more forgiving to work with, as its lower COE makes it less apt to crack than Moretti. However, it has a narrower working temperature range than Moretti, has fewer available colors, and is considerably more expensive. Also, its working range is at higher temperatures than Moretti, requiring larger torches and the use of oxygen instead of air. In addition to producing a hotter flame, the use of pure oxygen allows more control over the flame's oxidizing or reducing properties, which is necessary because some coloring chemicals in borosilicate glass react with any remaining oxygen in the flame either to produce the desired final color or to discolor if extra oxygen is present.

Tools for lampworking are similar to those used in glassblowing. Graphite or steel pads, rods, and other shapes are used for marvering the glass. Brass, graphite, or wooden molds (usually of apple or cherry wood) can be used to mold the hot glass. Tungsten picks can be used to drag glass around on the surface, or to bore a hole through a piece. Steel jacks, usually coated with beeswax, are used to neck down or cut off a piece.

After designing a piece, a lampworker must carefully plan how to construct it. Once ready to begin, the lampworker slowly introduces glass rod and tubing into the flame so that the pieces won't shatter from thermal shock. The glass is heated until molten, merged with other pieces, and shaped with various tools. All parts of the workpiece must be kept hot, at similar temperatures, or else they can crack or shatter. Once finished, the piece must be annealed in an oven, or else it will eventually crack or shatter.

Annealing, in glass terms, is heating a piece until its temperature reaches a stress-relief point, that is, a temperature at which the glass is still too hard to deform, but is soft enough for internal stresses to ease. The piece is then allowed to heat-soak until its temperature is even throughout; the time necessary for this varies depending on the type of glass and thickness of the thickest section. The piece is then slowly cooled at a predetermined rate until its temperature is below a critical point, at which it can no longer generate internal stresses, and then the temperature can safely be dropped to room temperature. This relieves the internal stresses, resulting in a piece which should last for many years. Glass which has not been annealed will usually at least crack, and can shatter due to a seemingly minor temperature change or other shock.

External links

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