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Decorative Glassware
Limited time only. New - Decorative Glassware See also marquetry and pick-up decoration. It is held at this heat for a soaking period, during which the glassed container relaxes all stress, but does not change shape, or slump. Ancient a term frequently used to mean all pre-roman and ancient roman . , In which a closed, water-filled v essel, when heated, was to rotate by jets of steam issuing from one or more projecting, bent tubes. Highly strained glasses break easily if subjected to mechanical or thermal shock. We offer Red Gift Glass, industry leading Decorative Glassware solutions, Red Glassware information, and Decorative Glassware tips. See Cranberry Glass. Air trap, air lock an air-filled void, which may be of almost any shape. Filigrana-a clear cased glassed container rod with a colored core. Millefiori, meaning "thousand flowers", is the best known type. Aurene a type of ornamental with an iridescent surface by spraying the with stannous chloride or lead chloride and reheating it under controlled atmospheric conditions. |
Decorative Glassware
Arabesque (1) in islamic , an intricate pattern of interlaced consisting of curvilinear stems and tendrils that terminate in leaves; (2) in renaissance and later european , a pattern of interlaced curvilinear stems, scrolls, and leaves, sometimes containing animal motifs. In the basic design, the colored glassed container will look like a flat ribbon twirling inside the clear , but may also be many thin strips of color which spiral lengthwise. Punty-a temporary handle attached to the glassed container piece in where a "cold touch" of glassed container to glassed container to glassed container will break off easily when the piece is finished. It is by melting sand in combination with other oxides such as lime or soda without crystallizing them, containing millions of tiny copper crystals which give the glassed containera golden sheen. The image can be anything from a face to a fish or even words. Aventurine (from french aventure, "chance") translucent with sparkling inclusions of , copper, or chromic oxide, first in venice in the 15th century. The name is derived from "la maison de l'art nouveau, " a for interior design that opened in paris in 1896.

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