glassmat

How-To: Repair a Separated Tiffany-Style Lampshade

How-To: Repair a Separated Tiffany-Style Lampshade

Learn how to re-assemble a broken Tiffany-style lampshade with not much more than epoxy and some basic hardware.

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How-To: Glass Klein Bottle

How-To: Glass Klein Bottle

Dutch glass crasftman Ramon Vink runs a studio called Poelgeest Glass. Using modern lampworking techniques and tools, he makes scientific apparatus and artistic pieces like this Klein bottle, the forming of which he has documented in a series of five YouTube videos. The videos themselves are pretty raw, with minimal post-production and no narration, but taken altogether they do a good job of documenting not just the general process of forming a Klein bottle from stock glass tube, but the specific tools and skilled manipulations required for each operation.

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Letting Goldfish Play Glasses

Letting Goldfish Play Glasses

Watch as goldfish play wine glasses from an aquarium beneath.

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Flexible “Willow Glass” Sheeting

Flexible “Willow Glass” Sheeting

Launched this summer, Corning’s Willow Glass is an ultra-thin (0.1mm), flexible, roll-processable glass sheet intended for use in next-generation display devices. From an applications point of view, it offers the possibility of curved displays and/or interfaces that wrap around object or devices, and from a manufacturing point of view, the possibility of producing display devices using continuous “roll-to-roll” assembly, kind of like how bulk paper goods are processed.

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BioGlass is a 100% Recycled Building Material

BioGlass is a 100% Recycled Building Material

Using a combination of pre- and post-consumer content, BioGlass is a material that can be used for countertops, backsplashes, partition walls, staircases, and exterior cladding.

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December is Glass Month

December is Glass Month

With November behind us, we’re wrapping up our 2012 Year of Materials theme, this month, with a focus on glass. Glass, in the broadest sense of the term, does not imply any particular type of atomic or molecular composition, but rather a particular kind of ordering of atoms or molecules in space. Or rather, a lack thereof. In understanding this it is helpful to contrast glasses with crystals, in which atoms/molecules are arranged in repeating rows, columns, or other identifiable patterns, like cannonballs stacked on a courthouse lawn. Glasses, on the other hand, are more like dice poured haphazardly into a jar.

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