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Technique: Simple Lay Up Gives Depth
Posted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 7:15 am
by Dairy Queen
This TECHNIQUE gives lots of DEPTH
(and it should be left in TECHNIQUES and not moved to photos)
There are a few tiny bubbles in the piece after the first firing. To eliminate bubbles entirely, use a chad.
Re: Technique: Simple Lay Up Gives Depth
Posted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 9:19 am
by Dairy Queen
Why has this posting been moved to photographs? It directly depicts a TECHNIQUE that I would like to share.
Re: Technique: Simple Lay Up Gives Depth
Posted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 11:09 am
by Morganica
Possibly because it's photos of a fairly typical layered fusing layup with little or no explanation? And no, using a chad is not likely to eliminate bubbles "entirely" in a layup like this.
You would get more control over the final outcome (and the bubbles) if you fused the layers separately, then stacked and fused again.
Re: Technique: Simple Lay Up Gives Depth
Posted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 1:36 pm
by Brad Walker
Dairy Queen wrote:Why has this posting been moved to photographs? It directly depicts a TECHNIQUE that I would like to share.
Because the Photos and Stuff folder is where you share photos of your work. If this had been a photo of a novel technique or something really different and innovative, I might have left it in the technique folder. But even then the Technique and Tools forum is more for asking questions about techniques and tools, while the Photos forum is where you share photos of pieces you've made or processes you want to share.
Re: Technique: Simple Lay Up Gives Depth
Posted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 7:54 pm
by Marty
Dairy Queen wrote:Why has this posting been moved to photographs? It directly depicts a TECHNIQUE that I would like to share.
This isn't really a TECHNIQUE; at this point, it's fairly common usage- layering, leaving clear in between to get depth. I understand that you think you discovered it but you just don't get out enough. Many of us have "discovered" techniques only to find that others, sometimes many older others (Klaus? the Romans?!) got there first.
BTW how did your mosaics work out? THAT was promising!
Re: Technique: Simple Lay Up Gives Depth
Posted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 9:25 pm
by Dairy Queen
Marty,
Many Warm Glass readers have followed me on Facebook, and requested I post techniques on Warm Glass. They have never seen simple layering before. I am not posting for the old dog, or the fossils. I will never do anything to impress the old guard. I am posting for new folks, who have never heard of layering, or other simple techniques.
I posted the results of my mosaics. Did you not see them here on Warm Glass? Were they bumped to a different category?
I am feeling less than welcome here in the land of the warm.
Rose Hawley
Re: Technique: Simple Lay Up Gives Depth
Posted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 9:28 pm
by DonMcClennen
I wonder where Cynthia would suggest you place a CHAD????

Re: Technique: Simple Lay Up Gives Depth
Posted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 11:10 pm
by Morganica
Dairy Queen wrote:Marty,
Many Warm Glass readers have followed me on Facebook, and requested I post techniques on Warm Glass. They have never seen simple layering before. I am not posting for the old dog, or the fossils. I will never do anything to impress the old guard. I am posting for new folks, who have never heard of layering, or other simple techniques.
I posted the results of my mosaics. Did you not see them here on Warm Glass? Were they bumped to a different category?
I am feeling less than welcome here in the land of the warm.
Rose Hawley
It's the "new folks" I'm concerned about. What you're showing in these photos is what every new glass enthusiast, including me, does in the first few times they flat-fuse something in the kiln, i.e., they stack a bunch of glass and chunks in the kiln then nuke the heck out of it to see what happens. What they pretty quickly learn is that it's a great way to make bubbles, the chunks spread a lot more than they'd imagine and the different colors start moving up and down in the glass. Nothing wrong with that...but you're presenting it as a valuable technique they should learn, with absolutely no additional information about what's going on or why, or the fact that there are better ways to do the same thing.
I liked your mosaics and wish you'd do more of them. But having a tantrum all over the board because your photos were moved is just a little bit silly. Brad's right, and it's his board. Let it go.