Showing posts with label Flashed Glass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flashed Glass. Show all posts

Sunday 17 December 2017

Flashed Glass

Red pot metal glass is often undesirably dark in colour and very expensive. The method developed to produce red glass was called flashing. In this procedure, a semi-molten gather of coloured glass was dipped into a pot of clear glass. As the bubble became enlarged, the red glass formed a thin coating on the inside. The formed glass was cut, flattened and annealed as any other blown sheet.


There were a number of advantages to this technique. It allowed a variety in the depth of red – and other deep colours - ranging from very dark and almost opaque, and sometimes merely tinted. The other advantage was that the colour of double-layered glass could be engraved, abraded, or etched to show colourless glass underneath. 


Other base colours are also used in making flashed glass, for example red flashed onto a pale green base.  Also see this post on finding the flashed side of glass.

There still exist a number of glass factories, notably in Germany, USA, England, France, Poland and Russia which continue to produce high quality glass by traditional methods primarily for the restoration of ancient windows.

Saturday 16 December 2017

Types of Glass

Glass Types by manufacturing method

There are several ways of categorising glass and this overview of glass types looks at the way the glass is manufactured.

Crown Glass
Crown glass is the oldest method of producing sheet glass and continued to be used until the 19th century.  This method consisted of blowing a very large bubble of glass.  It was then spun rapidly over a pit until the bubble collapsed into a disc that ranged from 1500mm to 1800mm diameter.  


This gave the thinnest and least marked glass at the outer portion of the disc.  The centre was the thickest and became known as the bullseye.  The glass was cut to provide the best use of the disc.  This limited the size of panes to what could be cut from the disc.  Diamond shapes were often cut from the remainder and the central bullseye was used in less expensive glazing.

Corning Museum of Glass


Cylinder Glass

Cylinder Glass is a handmade process that includes broad sheet glass. It was widely used from the 17th to the 19th century, and now is limited to a few manufacturers.  

"Among the Glass Workers" Harry Fenn, 1871


An elongated bubble was blown.  The top and bottom of the bubble are broken off and annealed.  Later the cylinder is placed in the lehr for reheating.  It is scored and when it breaks open along the score, the glass is flattened. Characteristically, it has a gradation of thickness with thicker edges where the top and bottom of the cylinder were cut off.

From IdoStuff


Flashed Glass
A development in cylinder glass was to make the bubble of two colours, with the dark colour gathered first and then encased in clear (or sometimes other pale colours) and blown into a cylinder.  This made dense colours more transparent and enabled more detail through abrading and etching.

Drawn Glass
Industrialisation of glass production began with the development of drawn glass.  This method of mass production of window glass was invented and developed by Emile Fourcault in Belgium. Full scale production began in the early 1900’s.  


The glass is drawn upwards from a vat of molten glass until it cools enough to be cut into sheets at the top of the tower.  The process is subject to slight variations in thickness due to uneven cooling and gravity. It enabled much larger panes of glass without the astragals that are common in Georgian and later houses.  It was the most common method of producing window glass until the 1950’s.

Table Glass
Table glass is the process of putting molten glass onto a flat surface (the table) and rolling the glass flat.  This has been used from the latter part of the 19th century to the present.  It enables textures to be pressed into the glass from the rolling cylinder.  It is easier to produce streaky and wispy glass by combining different colours on the table. 

Kokomo Glass Co.

This can be done as single sheets or further mechanised to roll out long ribbons of glass.  This is now mostly referred to as machine or hand rolled glass depending on the amount of mechanisation.


Float Glass

The glass that we now rely on for large clear windows began with the development of experiments by Alastair Pilkington and the company named after him.  This consisted of floating near molten glass on molten tin, hence the name, float glass.  This has been the standard method of glass for windows since the 1950’s.

Wednesday 23 December 2015

Score coated glass on the back - Kiln Forming Myths 16

Cut iridised glass on the back


The idea seems to be to get a more even score and avoid chipping of the iridised surface.

First, the iridised surface is almost microscopic in thickness.  It is put onto the surface as a mist of metallic oxides as it begins its run through the annealing lehr.  This thickness will not affect your scoring.

The back is usually rougher side of the glass and so will be more difficult to get a smooth, even score than the front iridised surface.

Chipping of the iridised surface is caused by too much pressure during the scoring.  Reduce your pressure and review your scoring practice.


Scoring the iridised surface with appropriate pressure will produce a clean break without chipping the surface.  These comments apply to dichroic and flashed glass too.

Monday 2 May 2011

Cutting Flashed Glass

Some recommend cutting flashed glass on the clear or non-flashed side. This is based on the idea that the flash is only laminated to the main body of glass. My view is that flashed glass has proved to be very stable over many centuries, and so is firmly a part of the whole sheet.

What is more important is to observe that flashed glass often has a bow. If you place the glass on the bench, you may find that it rocks or sits up from the bench. If you cut the glass on the convex side, that is the side which is not resting on the bench except at the edges, you may find that you break the glass during the scoring, unless you are using the lightest of pressures. It is more certain to get a good break if you score the glass on the concave side - that is where the edges are slightly raised from the bench. So the important element in deciding which side to cut is to score the concave side whether that has the flashed colour or not.

This does not occur with all flashed glasses, and is more important on large sheets than small ones. On the small ones, the curvature is so small as to be immaterial.

Friday 29 April 2011

Keeping Flashed Glass the Right Side Up

Once you have determined the flashed side on a sheet of glass, mark it with a felt tip or wax marker of some kind so that you will not have to perform this action each time. This should be carried over to each piece as you cut it away from the main piece.

When you have cut a piece from the main sheet, it is easy to turn it over and work on the clear rather than the flashed side. It is essential to know which the flashed side is if you are going to do any etching of any kind. So, as soon as you have cut the piece, mark the flashed side. This will keep you certain that you are working on the flashed side.

Another method to keep track of the flashed side is to mark across the intended score line. After scoring and breaking you will have both pieces of glass marked. All you need to do is make sure you always mark the same side - flashed or clear. Some like to cut on the clear side and some the flashed side. All you have to do is to determine which your practice is.

Monday 25 April 2011

Distinguishing the Coloured Side of Flashed Glass

On smaller pieces of flashed glass you can determine which the flashed or coloured side is by putting it to the light and viewing it through the edge. If the flash is very thin or you cannot determine which the flashed side is, you can alter the angle a little. If you tip the glass down slightly and the light is coming through the clear side, there will be very little variation in what you see.

If you tip it down and you see the colour very distinctly, then the flash is on the upper side.

Also note that on the left side of the glass you can see the effect of the cutter pressure on the glass.  These little hook like marks are evidence of the stress caused by scoring the glass.  This is the kind of mark you will see on glass that has adequate, but not excessive pressure applied during the scoring.

Now back to the subject of the flash.



On larger pieces this is more difficult, and dangerous to you and the glass, as you risk breakage by holding large sheets horizontally. So you can use your grozers to nip a little glass off the edge. If there is no change in colour of the chipped edge, you have taken glass off the clear side. When you chip off the flash, there will be a little bit of clear showing which the coloured side is. Here are two examples.



Once you have determined which the flashed side is, mark it and all off-cuts with a felt tip or wax marker of some kind so that you will not have to perform this action each time.