Whitethorn Glass Plus
- 97 items sold
This item will be posted to you by Whitethorn Glass within 3 days of receiving payment.
Shipping destination | Cost | Additional items |
---|---|---|
United Kingdom | £4.50 | |
Europe | Doesn't deliver here | |
United States | Doesn't deliver here | |
Rest of the World | Doesn't deliver here |
You have 14 days, from receipt, to notify the seller if you wish to cancel your order or exchange an item.
Unless faulty, the following types of items are non-refundable: items that are personalised, bespoke or made-to-order to your specific requirements; items which deteriorate quickly (e.g. food), personal items sold with a hygiene seal (cosmetics, underwear) in instances where the seal is broken; digital items.
Please note that if your order is being posted outside mainland UK, you (or the recipient) may have to pay customs or VAT charges and a handling fee. The seller is not responsible for any charges or fees that may incur.
This beautiful fused glass dish has been made using the strip construction technique.
The strips are cut from opaque cream and transparent amber, light grey and pale yellow art glass. It has a substantial chunky feel and semi-transparent appearance and measures 24 x 14cm with a maximum height of 4cm. Looks great as a display item - preferably place on a plain, light coloured surface or the surface will be visible through the transparent glass.
Construction notes: The strip-cut technique involves precisely cutting a large number of narrow strips of glass, in contrasting colours, and packing them tightly together on edge. Placing the glass on edge is what gives the finished item its chunky, substantial appearance. There is a LOT of glass in this dish for its size - 167 strips in four colours and eight sizes, all of which were cut by hand and stacked on edge, and incorporating open spaces, which the neighbouring glass flows into during the fusing process. Fusing temperature reaches 815°C which results in the beautiful merging together of the strips. After fusing, the resulting blank was cold worked to finesse the edges and then placed over a ceramic mould and fired again at a lower temperature to give the final shape. Final photos show the the construction process underway.
Designed by Catherine Dickenson
More items from this category