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#glitz & grandeur – @glitzandgrandeur on Tumblr
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Glitz & Grandeur

@glitzandgrandeur / glitzandgrandeur.tumblr.com

Glass is amazing! It’s a suspended liquid that moves and flows. It changes with light and the lack of light! It's smooth and glossy, it has texture and depth. It's cool, it's hot, it melts, but is strong. It sparkles. It shines. It even casts rainbows. Oh glass, how I love you! I'm Susan, a stained glass artisan. I also work with fused glass, and make handcrafted jewelry. This, my blog, it's where I post pics, ramble on, and share things that catch my eye, turn me on, spark a reaction, or that I just plain like. You can find pictures of projects in progress here, instead of just the finished pieces on Etsy. I have an little shop on Etsy called Glitz & Grandeur. You can connect directly to Etsy, or directly to my shop by clicking the appropriate 'Etsy' or 'Glitz & Grandeur' link below. You can also find my page on Facebook under "Artists" as Glitz & Grandeur, or click the Facebook icon below. The same goes for my Pinterest boards. Thanks for visiting!
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reblogged

Great East Window, Holy Trinity Sloan Square, London - February 2015

Arts and Crafts window by  Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris

This is a terrific arts and crafts era church with magnificent windows. Really a must see while in London. It is in the same neighborhood as the Saatchi Gallery, another not to be missed London attraction, so you can combine the two with ease.

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One way to cover a large window is to use multiple panels.  This window is about 72 inches wide by maybe 48 inches tall.  Five panels are hung to cover the space (because I want full coverage).  

The three in the center are only there for the time being.  I have a sun or flower (however you opt to view it) design planned for that space, but I can't seem to decide on if it should be one large square panel, or two rectangular panels .... a single large panel always looks nice and impressive, but two smaller panels are easier to work with, and more versatile should they ever need to be used elsewhere or sold.  Kinda digging on all the bevel panels though, they let lots of light through.

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I find glass as seductive as it is challenging. As a particularly unforgiving medium, an artist has endless creative opportunities to design for its unique properties—the only limitations are their imagination and skill in working with the material. I’ve always been captivated by how one can use this enigmatic material to achieve virtually any form, hold elements in suspension, and achieve great detail or soft abstraction. Its flexibility as a medium is matched by the difficulty it presents in using it to execute precise work.

My current work is an intensive exploration of patterns, colors and transparency created through multi-layered cane and murrine (colored rods and patterned cross-sections of glass). While varied in composition and design, I most often create work within a series of graceful forms that I consider three dimensional canvases. The diversity in my compositions reflects my desire to constantly experiment and explore a variety of ideas simultaneously. Some themes in my work include windows into or through a piece, things hidden & revealed and extreme detail. Colors in contrasting and/or complimentary tertiary tones woven into complex patterns challenge expectations of the amount of detail glass can carry and its place in the art world. My influences include textiles, ethnically distinct colors and shapes as well as the marine environment.

Creating my work begins with meticulous planning and designing of colors and patterns. After I pull the cane and murrine, I carefully compose these elements to design the final work, all days prior to blowing it. I enjoy this process of thoughtful creativity and the contrasting intensity of executing work in the hotshop, where the limited window to shape molten glass requires precision and urgency. The dual challenge of designing and executing complex work satisfies both the artist and the craftsman in me and I continually find it exciting to create a piece I’ve poured days over, watching it come to life in the fire.

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