I always love how much you explore, this was a fun experiment!! I started glass with stained glass, and work around a lot of fusers, so I tend to play with fusible sheet glass scraps on the torch sometimes, it's really fun! Though sometimes they really do not like the flame chemistry. If you need a little more stability, a boro punty will go a long way. You just have to make sure to keep heating it, it works but it will want to pop off your project! :) Thanks again for sharing!!
awsome work as allwase mate. f find your exploration of glass and your demonstraioni of skills amazing allwase mate. your humbleness with your gratatude allso is inspiring mate
Thank you I also do stained glass. I would love to see your ideas on incorporating the two. I’m afraid that trying to put stained glass to heat with a rod like to draw. I would break the stain glass. I’m dying to see what you do to figure that out.
Hello Patty! I would most likely do the hot working first, unless I use borosilicate instead of soft glass for the stained sections. Thanks for watching!
I have a good kiln video: th-cam.com/video/WKWUlEGhvx4/w-d-xo.html After turning on your kiln and reaching annealing temp (950f soft glass, 1050f hard glass) you can place your finished work inside. It needs to anneal (soak) roughly about 1 hour per inch thickness. You can keep your work in while you fill the kiln with more. Once you're done working you cycle the temperature down slowly based on a program/schedule to prevent shocking the glass with a rapid temperature change.
I've been a long time fan, would you be interested in letting your content be shared for free on a platform for inmates to watch? Asking for a friend :) Thanks!!
I always love how much you explore, this was a fun experiment!! I started glass with stained glass, and work around a lot of fusers, so I tend to play with fusible sheet glass scraps on the torch sometimes, it's really fun! Though sometimes they really do not like the flame chemistry. If you need a little more stability, a boro punty will go a long way. You just have to make sure to keep heating it, it works but it will want to pop off your project! :) Thanks again for sharing!!
Thank you for the ride. 😊
wonderful, watching with purpose
Cool video !!!
Try explore it with smaller chunks of scrap glass from the bottle, it will be more easy to handle. 🙏🏽
That's a good idea to break it down first, but I do like a challenge.
@@MattJasa agreed 🔥
awsome work as allwase mate. f find your exploration of glass and your demonstraioni of skills amazing allwase mate. your humbleness with your gratatude allso is inspiring mate
Thanks Zac! I'm working hard right now but try to keep checking comments. Stay melty my friend!
Thank you I also do stained glass. I would love to see your ideas on incorporating the two. I’m afraid that trying to put stained glass to heat with a rod like to draw. I would break the stain glass. I’m dying to see what you do to figure that out.
Hello Patty! I would most likely do the hot working first, unless I use borosilicate instead of soft glass for the stained sections. Thanks for watching!
Could you explain how from start to finish your use of your kiln I'm needing to learn how to use mine
I have a good kiln video: th-cam.com/video/WKWUlEGhvx4/w-d-xo.html
After turning on your kiln and reaching annealing temp (950f soft glass, 1050f hard glass) you can place your finished work inside. It needs to anneal (soak) roughly about 1 hour per inch thickness. You can keep your work in while you fill the kiln with more. Once you're done working you cycle the temperature down slowly based on a program/schedule to prevent shocking the glass with a rapid temperature change.
I've been a long time fan, would you be interested in letting your content be shared for free on a platform for inmates to watch? Asking for a friend :) Thanks!!
You can watch it through TH-cam and use playlists. The ad revenue helps pay for the expenses to keep the show going.