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November 5, 2011 By Dru Cortez

Glassware: The Clear View on Glassware Artisans

Once you get a peek into the world of glassware artisans, it’s almost amazing to watch the combination of skill and artistry that comes with the age old techniques that are still used to make art glass and glassware today.  Who better than the Corning Glassware Museum to give a demonstration of the skills and techniques used to create blown glass and art glass.

Not too bad a product, when you realize that glass is largely made from sand (or rather silica).  According to Wikipedia…

“The history of creating glass can be traced back to 3500 BCE in Mesopotamia.[1] The term glass developed in the late Roman Empire. It was in the Roman glassmaking center at Trier, now in modern Germany, that the late-Latin term glesum originated, probably from a Germanic word for a transparent, lustrous substance”

All I can say, that meals, and the beverages we consume, at meals are made more elegant and beautiful with the addition of glassware. And what other objects can be made from glass?  Objects made out of glass include not only traditional objects such as vessels (bowls, vases, bottles, and other containers), paperweights, marbles, beads, but an endless range of sculpture and installation art as well.

November 4, 2011 By Dru Cortez

Getting Ready for the Thanksgiving Holiday With Fall Colors

Thanksgiving Vintage Postcard

It seems as the days get cooler, the fall leaves start to turn into golden brown and red hues, and the nights are longer that I start thinking about all the yummy and tasty foods that are so popular around the Fall and Thanksgiving season.  Delicious comfort foods like…

  • Mashed Potatoes with Gravy
  • Chicken Pot Pies
  • Warm, Oven Baked Cornbread
  • Pumpkin Pie or Cherry Pie
  • Green Beans With Almonds
  • Jellied Cranberry Sauce
  • Apple Cider

And why do I bring this up in a blog about vintage items?  Simply, because there are a lot of vintage and antique flatware, dinnerware and glassware available on Ebay, Tias, Rubylane and other similar sites that you can intermix with your modern items or  use  exclusively for your holiday dining to serve all those delicious foods.

Thanksgiving Turkey PostcardThis is the season to showcase your best items, collectibles in the colors of fall such as brown transferware, copper pots and cooking utensils and other holiday serving dishes!

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Image Credit: Flickr by Suzee Q

 

October 30, 2011 By Dru Cortez

Art Pottery: An Artisan at Work

Through the power of modern day tools such as Youtube, the centuries old techniques and work  that this artisan (potter) demonstrates in this video becomes a powerful testimony to the skills and techniques passed down through generations and utilized in order to create a modern example of an ancient Greek vase.

It’s techniques similar to these which have contributed to some of the most well known American collectible potteries such as Rookwood, Napco, Lefton, etc.

In modern times, we tend to take for granted all the manufacturing processes that are involved in making the pottery and ceramic items we use everyday.  Perhaps watching this video  will allow you to see just what goes into making all the ceramic ware that is used in our daily life, such as dishes, cups, mugs and saucers in a new light.

Before modern day manufacturing techniques, this was the only way a household could obtain dishware or decorative items for their homes.

Ceramic Terms

I have  included a few ceramic terms that are pertinent to this video:

Fabric :  the clay body or paste of a ceramic.

Leather Hard:  The stage in which unfired pottery is no longer in a plastic or wet state, and can be handled without distortion to the form.

Paste:   The clays and other materials that constitute the body of a vessel.

Press Molded: A vessel or vessel element ( such as a handle or spout) which is formed by pushing wet clay over a mold.

Slip:   A liquid mixture of clay and water applied to vessel surfaces.

Throwing:  The manufacture of pottery by  hand on a wheel.

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