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  2. Scoring knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scoring_knife

    The material can then be broken or severed along the groove, resulting in a straight and smooth cut. Scoring knives can be used to cut various materials, including glass, [1] tile, [2] plexiglas, [3] and other hard materials. For softer materials like plexiglas, a razor blade can be used as a scoring tool.

  3. Ceramic tile cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramic_tile_cutter

    The first tile cutter was designed to facilitate the work and solve the problems that masons had when cutting a mosaic of encaustic tiles (a type of decorative tile with pigment, highly used in 1950s, due to the high strength needed because of the high hardness and thickness of these tiles).

  4. Glass cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_cutter

    Glass cutter, showing hardened steel cutting wheel (far left), notches for snapping, and ball (on end of handle) for tapping. A glass cutter is a tool used to make a shallow score in one surface of a piece of glass (normally a flat one) that is to be broken in two pieces, for example to fit a window.

  5. Water jet cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_jet_cutter

    Materials commonly cut with a water jet include textiles, rubber, foam, plastics, leather, composites, stone, tile, glass, metals, food, paper and much more. [46] "Most ceramics can also be cut on an abrasive water jet as long as the material is softer than the abrasive being used (between 7.5 and 8.5 on the Mohs scale)". [47]

  6. Glass tile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_tile

    Glass was used in mosaics as early as 2500 BC, but it was not until the 3rd century BC that innovative artisans in Greece, Persia, and India created glass tiles.. Whereas clay tile is dated as early as 8,000 BC, there were significant barriers to the development of glass tile, including the high temperatures required to melt glass and the complexities of annealing glass curves.

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