marker .. burns off?
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marker .. burns off?
This has probably been asked before, but I could not find in archives.. will a sharpee (permanent) marker burn off when fusing,
without residue ?
Thanks, friends..
Bonnie
without residue ?
Thanks, friends..
Bonnie
Bonnie Rubinstein
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Other factors are if you have a deadline, and the glass you are using is a special order, or out of stock.Brock wrote:Not necessarily. If you're making a small piece, no problem.
If you're making a large expensive labour intensive piece . . . .
. . . it'll leave a mark. Brock
I use black sharpie's and they've always fired off cleanly, but I run with scissors too.

Best advice is 'better safe than sorry'.
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and the new silver sharpie is the worst... it takes a solvent to get it off, and any left behind fuses into the glass leaving a silver mark... maybe it can be used for design elements.
Tony
Tony
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Gold/Silver marker Question
Tony or should I say Tony(s), are the gold and silver markers formulated with real precious metals? Will they stay intact like the Hanovia gold or wil they stain like our good old friend silver?
If I applied one of these metal colored markers to my glass project and laid the glass -decorated side down- against the kiln shelf, would it leave a bleeding stain that contaminates the kiln shelf?
If I applied one of these metal colored markers to my glass project and laid the glass -decorated side down- against the kiln shelf, would it leave a bleeding stain that contaminates the kiln shelf?
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Re: Gold/Silver marker Question
GaleGale aka artistefem wrote:Tony or should I say Tony(s), are the gold and silver markers formulated with real precious metals? Will they stay intact like the Hanovia gold or wil they stain like our good old friend silver?
If I applied one of these metal colored markers to my glass project and laid the glass -decorated side down- against the kiln shelf, would it leave a bleeding stain that contaminates the kiln shelf?
I'm not sure as I didn't fired it face down. I just know that I was using it to trace a pattern for cutting on my bandsaw, and I didn't get all of the marker off near the edge and it was still there after firing. The big question was if it was still silver after firing or was it just white?... not sure either. I think this calls for a quick experiment.
Tony
The tightrope between being strange and being creative is too narrow to walk without occasionally landing on both sides..." Scott Berkun
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Just what I was thinking. Will throw a bunch of marker tests in with the next glue run. My experience with the gold and silver markers is that they don't stay their pre fired color, but turn brownish. Never tried face down, and don't know what they use to get the color. I do know they use some rather nasty solvents and you should use them with good ventilation. In case there is silver in the marker, I would hesitate in doing a face down firing, unless it were on paper.
I used the silver Sharpie to mark on BE gold purple. To clean the glass I put it in extremely hot soapy water and let it soak for 5 minutes or so. I used a soapy rag to wipe the glass and all of the silver came off. I have fused the pieces and there isn't any sign of residue.Tony Smith wrote:and the new silver sharpie is the worst... it takes a solvent to get it off, and any left behind fuses into the glass leaving a silver mark... maybe it can be used for design elements.
Tony
Stacey
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http://www.dermnetnz.org/index.htmlChip wrote:Nose grease?????
cleaning silver sharpie
i just use a little windex on a chunk of 1/4 inch thick fiber paper/blanket & it rubs right off.