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Bullseye Scrap - What to do with all this?

Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 10:51 am
by starchimes (Andrea)
I never throw away my bullseye glass. I keep accumulating more and more. What do you guys do with your excess. I have tons of little pieces.

excess scrap

Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 12:05 pm
by Dolores
Believe it or not, scrap can be a good thing. You can lampwork beads with it, make mosaics, or fuse jewelry. Try it as accents on your larger pieces, make your own frit, stick similar colors in a clear vase with some artificial flowers (great display at shows!). Polish it in a rock tumbler and sprinkle it over a tabletop for added color. If you're feeling enterprising, try auctioning it off on Ebay or Yahoo. Has anyone gotten bored enough to try fusing it all in one big lump just to see what happens? Oh yeah, make stringers accents with a torch, put it at the bottom of your potted plants for irrigation, put it in a jar and play "guess the number of glass pieces in this jar and win a prize" game at your next party after which you can play the "guess how much glass is stashed in my studio" game. The possiblilities are endless! :lol:

DOLORES (who currently has no idea how much glass is stashed in her studio) :wink:

Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 1:49 pm
by Joanne Owsley
How about pattern bars? Don't forget those!

Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 2:01 pm
by Phil Hoppes
You should send it to me as fast as possible.

:lol:

Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 2:53 pm
by Jerry Cave
My wifes scrap are my treasures. Since she can't use tiny pieces I get them for my jewelry work. All contributions gladly accepted.

Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 3:29 pm
by Kitty
i cleaned up a lot of pint containers of scraps recently. here's one of the pattern bar plates. it still needs to be acid etched, but otherwise it's done. the colors other than the white are all transparent, so it's got a nice translucent quality. there's a fair amount of clear in it. pardon my cheesy webcam -- rather poor quality.

Image

Image

Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 3:47 pm
by Rob Morey
Scrap?? What's that? Here is what I do with my smaller pieces.

http://www.ramoreydesign.com/shelfmelt.html

I put this together in a hurry so please excuse any spelling errors or some of the other weird stuff that happens on "raw" untested sites.

Rob

Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 4:30 pm
by Amy on Salt Spring
Cool "in action" pictures Rob. This brings up something I have wondered about, not ever having done a pot melt. Don't you end up with little stalagmites of glass from the glass up to whatever device it flowed out of? Do you have to break them off and then put it back in the kiln and go high again to have them smooth out?
-Amy

Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2003 5:01 pm
by Rob Morey
Yes I do end up with some of the glass still stuck to the original hardware. In some cases I cut off the attached edge with a tile saw. Most of the time I usually just make some scores and then break it all off where the stalagtites meet the glass. Because there is always kiln wash on the bottom and almost always some divit elsewhere, I sandblast everything removing any extra glass that I don't want. Some people cut these up into pattern bars. I don't do pattern bars. I use them as elements in larger pieces.

Rob

Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2003 11:55 am
by starchimes (Andrea)
Wow! Thanks for all the ideas. I just have a quickfire kiln right now. Maybe soon I will get a bigger one. I make a lot of flower suncatchers. I have tons of scrap pieces all shaped the same. Image cutting petal after petal. Well I have tons of the shapes that form in between the petals.

Image

I make alot of frit. I really like the custom glass melt from the scrap. That is awesome!

Thanks,
Andrea