Has anyone ever tried fusing sea glass? Does anyone know the COE?
Thanks for any replies.
Ever try fusing sea glass
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Re: Ever try fusing sea glass
You can fuse sea glass using glue, not heat.Kim K wrote:Has anyone ever tried fusing sea glass? Does anyone know the COE?
Thanks for any replies.
Or am I wrong and expansion coefficeints will also kill a glued joint?
Bert
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Re: Ever try fusing sea glass
It doesn't seem like there would be any point in firing it, since it would lose the surface that makes it special. Most people glue it, or drill holes and hang it. The COE is variable, depending on what it came from; mostly bottles is my guess.Kim K wrote:Has anyone ever tried fusing sea glass? Does anyone know the COE?
Thanks for any replies.
Els
Re: Ever try fusing sea glass
I don't know. I think it would be okay. I used to foil it and make lamps out of it. BrockBert Weiss wrote:You can fuse sea glass using glue, not heat.Kim K wrote:Has anyone ever tried fusing sea glass? Does anyone know the COE?
Thanks for any replies.
Or am I wrong and expansion coefficeints will also kill a glued joint
My memory is so good, I can't remember the last time I forgot something . . .
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If you're just looking for the LOOK of sea glass (as opposed to actually having a bunch you are trying to figure out how to use...) you can tumble compatible glass and it gets the same look.
(I did this with a nice batch of puddle I had to chisel off my kiln self once.
. Actually, I ended up using the tumbled glass 'stones' on several things - if you just barely tack fuse, they get a sheen, but still look frosted/matt, the hotter you go the more the matt goes away, but they still have that organic shape.)
Linda
(I did this with a nice batch of puddle I had to chisel off my kiln self once.

Linda