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  2. Marta Klonowska - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marta_Klonowska

    Marta Klonowska (born in 1964, Warsaw) [1] is a Polish glass maker who is best known for her many animal sculptures. She often depicts animals with a relationship to historical figures or paintings, in natural poses using broken colored glass (cf. Lynx After a Sketchbook Page by Albrecht Durer).

  3. Powder glass beads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powder_glass_beads

    Powder glass beads are made from finely ground glass, the main source being broken and unusable bottles and a great variety of other scrap glasses. Special glasses such as old cobalt medicine bottles, cold cream jars, and many other types of glasses from plates, ashtrays, window panes - to name only a few - are occasionally bought new, just for ...

  4. Glossary of glass art terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_Glass_Art_terms

    Vitreography (printing technique) – use of a 3⁄8-inch-thick (9.5 mm) float glass matrix instead of the traditional matrices of metal, wood or stone. Vitrigraph pulling – pulling molten glass strings from a wall mounted kiln—called a vitrigraph kiln— usually into shapes such as spirals.

  5. Kintsugi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kintsugi

    Lacquerware is a longstanding tradition in Japan [6] [7] and, at some point, kintsugi may have been combined with maki-e as a replacement for other ceramic repair techniques. . While the process is associated with Japanese craftsmen, the technique was also applied to ceramic pieces of other origins including China, Vietnam, and Kor

  6. Trencadís - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trencadís

    Trencadís, a Catalan term that means 'broken up', and by extension, 'broken up tiles', is the name for this method as it was revived in early 20th century Catalan Modernisme, while pique assiette is a more general name for the technique that comes from the French language. In French, pique assiette ('plate thief') is a term for a scrounger or ...

  7. Glass art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_art

    Then the builders of the great Norman and Gothic cathedrals of Europe took the art of glass to new heights with the use of stained glass windows as a major architectural and decorative element. Glass from Murano, in the Venetian Lagoon, (also known as Venetian glass) is the result of hundreds of years of refinement and invention. Murano is ...

  8. Arts and Crafts movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arts_and_Crafts_movement

    The Arts and Crafts use of stained glass was popular in Ireland, with Harry Clarke the best-known artist and also with Evie Hone. The architecture of the style is represented by the Honan Chapel (1916) in Cork city in the grounds of University College Cork . [ 77 ]

  9. Glass recycling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_recycling

    Bottles in different colours Mixed colour glass cullet Public glass waste collection point for different colours of containers. Glass recycling is the processing of waste glass into usable products. [1] Glass that is crushed or imploded and ready to be remelted is called cullet. [2] There are two types of cullet: internal and external.