the tiles are on the top, and consist of 42 with clearcaped dichro, and a pair of center medallions of dichro on black, slumped over the bottom of a wok to make a convex surface. the bottom of the gate is woven copper strips.
courtyard gate
Moderator: Brad Walker
courtyard gate
i commissioned a steel artist to make a gate for my front courtyard. i had him design in various holes that i filled with mostly dichroic glass tiles. after dealing with slow artists (like that never happened to me), i've finally gotten it finished.

the tiles are on the top, and consist of 42 with clearcaped dichro, and a pair of center medallions of dichro on black, slumped over the bottom of a wok to make a convex surface. the bottom of the gate is woven copper strips.
the tiles are on the top, and consist of 42 with clearcaped dichro, and a pair of center medallions of dichro on black, slumped over the bottom of a wok to make a convex surface. the bottom of the gate is woven copper strips.
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i'll try to get some more in the coming days.Don Burt wrote:That is cool Charlie. Can we have detail shots?
Is that a carved pumpkin?
it's a hollow ceramic pumpkin. i put a candle in it, but could just put it over a light just as well. good forever, doesn't rot or smell, and i can just put it away in the garage for the 11 months of the year i don't need it.
i'll get some soonly.Leslie Ihde wrote:Charlie, that's really beautiful, a great combination. Do you have close up shots? How did you adhere the glass?
Leslie
i cut a piece of 1/4" float glass to fit in the hole, and used clear silicone glue on both sides of that to hold the tiles on. the tiles are 1/4" larger than the holes.
the center slumped sections were done the same way, except i used a few pieces of 1/4" float to build up the center section to reach the back of the inside surface.
Nice
I like that Charlie, I noticed a lot of gates on entry ways of large houses on my long drive to Fredricksburg Texas (Lots of country driving) about a month ago that had the nice cut out designs on them. The glass really makes it stand out. It looks great.
Re: courtyard gate
pretty damn kewl charlie!charlie wrote:i commissioned a steel artist to make a gate for my front courtyard. i had him design in various holes that i filled with mostly dichroic glass tiles. after dealing with slow artists (like that never happened to me), i've finally gotten it finished.
the tiles are on the top, and consist of 42 with clearcaped dichro, and a pair of center medallions of dichro on black, slumped over the bottom of a wok to make a convex surface. the bottom of the gate is woven copper strips.


D
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Re: back pic
it looks identical. hold up your monitor to a mirror and it would be the same.doctac wrote:could you post a pic of the other side of the gate....interested in seeing how you assembled this

i basically made twice as many tiles, and then cut float tiles to fit the holes. the tiles are 1/4" larger than the holes. chose the thickness of the float to be the same, or just a hair thinner than the door. silicone the float piece to the back of one tile, have swmbo hold that up on one side, goop up the back of the other tile, and smoosh them together. tape and let sit for 24 hours.
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Fun Charlie
Ain't ahht great and ain't it great to have some for yourself.
Ain't ahht great and ain't it great to have some for yourself.
Bert
Bert Weiss Art Glass*
http://www.customartglass.com
Furniture Lighting Sculpture Tableware
Architectural Commissions
Bert Weiss Art Glass*
http://www.customartglass.com
Furniture Lighting Sculpture Tableware
Architectural Commissions
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wow!
That would make me happy every time I came home. What was it like collaborating with the metal worker? Did s/he basically just cut your design, or was there more to it?
love it. lucky for you it would look odd in MD....
love it. lucky for you it would look odd in MD....
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Re: wow!
it was....different.Cheryl wrote:That would make me happy every time I came home. What was it like collaborating with the metal worker? Did s/he basically just cut your design, or was there more to it?
love it. lucky for you it would look odd in MD....
we interviewed 4 different companies for a gate, looking at design books, a bunch of proposals, getting bids, etc, and didn't really feel that they were listening to us very well. my wife happened to be in the local coffee shop getting her usual mocha cocoa lowfat latte whatever and was overheard by another patron when discussing it with the counter dude. they said 'oh, you ought to talk to gordon' who happened to be the ex-president of the sonoran arts league (http://www.sonoranartsleague.org/). we called him up, he came over, did some rough measurements and went away. he came back with some sketches. we had our input into some changes, he then came back a few weeks later with a full sized design on paper that we liked, so signed a contract for it.
being an artist, he then promptly forgot about us.

i have a painter friend in tucson with the same malady. even his wife says that 'tom does things on tom-time, not normal time'.