General - StudioBlog :: Jeff Benroth Glass https://www.benroth.com/studioblog project + process = product Tue, 17 Nov 2009 06:19:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Studio Sale :: November 28 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=164 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=164#respond Tue, 17 Nov 2009 06:19:41 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=164 As usual, we will have an open studio during Thanksgiving weekend. Come by on Saturday, November 28 from 10-5 for great discounts on glass, demos in the studio, snacks and drinks. Since the casting event in August was so popular we will likely do a demonstration of sand casting for the studio sale as well. […]

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As usual, we will have an open studio during Thanksgiving weekend. Come by on Saturday, November 28 from 10-5 for great discounts on glass, demos in the studio, snacks and drinks. Since the casting event in August was so popular we will likely do a demonstration of sand casting for the studio sale as well. If you’d like to participate, please send us an e-mail – we may make it another workshop-type event if there is sufficient interest.

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Sucess in the sand https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=144 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=144#respond Fri, 21 Aug 2009 14:40:49 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=144 I think the sand-casting event was a success. Everyone enjoyed the process, the glass looked great and we at the studio learned a few things, too. Look for a repeat soon; this was a good intro but everyone was ready for more, and wanting to spread the word…

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I think the sand-casting event was a success. Everyone enjoyed the process, the glass looked great and we at the studio learned a few things, too. Look for a repeat soon; this was a good intro but everyone was ready for more, and wanting to spread the word…

pressing into the sand

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Did you find everything today? https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=130 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=130#respond Fri, 24 Jul 2009 16:25:18 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=130 I’m pleased to say we’ve found a simple way to make some of our stuff available for sale, direct from the studio. We are now set up with BigCartel to offer items that are in stock, with payments made securely though PayPal. We may eventually integrate a shopping cart into the next version of the […]

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I’m pleased to say we’ve found a simple way to make some of our stuff available for sale, direct from the studio. We are now set up with BigCartel to offer items that are in stock, with payments made securely though PayPal. We may eventually integrate a shopping cart into the next version of the website, but that’s a little further down the road.

We still want to support our retailer galleries, so we also put the list of stores more prominently on the contact page – no more pop-up window. And all stores with sites are now directly linked from that page.

Speaking of which, the JBG website has undergone some significant overall improvements, thanks to Scott Hammond Studio. I have always liked the original design but as monitors have gotten larger, it began to look a little small. And as we added more items to the site, the navigation was also becoming cluttered overloaded.

Scott did a great job of refreshing the existing look and cleaning it up; please take a look when you have a chance.

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“The Scout” digs our glass logs https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=125 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=125#respond Tue, 14 Jul 2009 05:20:54 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=125 David Keeps, home editor for the LA Times, fell in love with our limited-edition cast glass firelogs after our most recent e-blast and decided to put them on the blog for the home section of the Los Angeles Times. Along with Chad DeWitt, who collaborated on these pieces, I’m really pleased to have them featured and […]

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David Keeps, home editor for the LA Times, fell in love with our limited-edition cast glass firelogs after our most recent e-blast and decided to put them on the blog for the home section of the Los Angeles Times. Along with Chad DeWitt, who collaborated on these pieces, I’m really pleased to have them featured and I hope that the new edition will be a smash success.

Please check out:

– our new web page on the logs
– the LA Times blog posting
– Chad DeWitt’s site and latest work

Thanks also to my good buddy Jon Taylor, who has enough taste to design not only his clients’ homes and workspaces but also his own – enough so that I decided to shoot the logs in his Oakland hills home, just up the hill. Thanks, Jon and Tom – the photos came out much better this time…

Last, thanks to my Scott Hammond for taking care of, and improving, benroth.com post-haste. It was a shambles before and during, but now it sparkles again.

UPDATE: An edited version of the blog post also ran in the LA Times print edition, Home section on August 1, 2009. Thanks David!

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How do you get color in the glass? https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=113 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=113#respond Thu, 29 Jan 2009 21:45:13 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=113 I’ve heard this question so many times… I think the only question more commonly asked of glassblowers is whether we know that guy on PBS with the eyepatch and the curly hair. So here are the basics of color in blown glass, once and for all: Unless it’s painted or stained somehow, glass gets its […]

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I’ve heard this question so many times… I think the only question more commonly asked of glassblowers is whether we know that guy on PBS with the eyepatch and the curly hair. So here are the basics of color in blown glass, once and for all:

Unless it’s painted or stained somehow, glass gets its hue from metal oxides and minerals. These are incorporated into the mixture of raw materials  before it is melted, and voila – colored glass.

In factories and large-studios, colors may be formulated and melted in-house. These are usually proprietary, and some are easier to replicate than others. If a studio or factory is melting an entire furnace of colored glass, the intensity can also be controlled with the formulation. Additionally, the number of colors available will depend on the number of furnaces or melting chambers, and unless it’s a very large factory or one that uses only a few colors, it is not unusual to see a cycle of colors melted over time – the melts often go from light to dark over a period of weeks or months, then the pot is “washed” with clear glass and the cycle begins again.

In “small” studios like mine, we have one furnace and it’s got clear glass in it. With all the different colors required by our production and custom projects, it would be impractical to try to melt color to satisfy our needs, on-the-fly – although some studios maintain a second furnace with one or more smaller pots in it, which can be filled with colors as needed for individual runs. We (and many other studios) use pre-formulated, concentrated colors which come from color houses and are standardized – much like tubes of paint. There are hundreds of colors available and a whole science and technology has developed over the years for their use and application.

They typically come in three basic formats: rod, powder, and frit. The rod is a baton of solid glass, powder is self-explanatory, and “frit” refers to granules, which are sorted and sold in different sizes. All of these are applied to each piece as it is worked, rather than thrown into a furnace. This make the process of blowing any one piece slightly longer, but with much more color control and possibilities for variation.

Because the color is so concentrated, we use a very thin layer of it; if you were to evaluate it by weight, the colored glass only accounts for perhaps 5% of the volume of the finished piece, at most. So if you’re lucky enough to break a piece of our glass, look at the edge of one of the pieces. It will show you that what looked like a totally colored object is (or was) in fact clear glass with a thin layer or two of color sandwiched into the wall.

Amen.

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Gay Outlaw https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=108 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=108#respond Thu, 29 Jan 2009 21:41:28 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=108 How great a name is that? I first met Gay in 2001 when I was assigned as a gaffer to blow glass for her during her visit to A.S.A.P., a long-gone mini-residency program in San Francisco. Since that time, we have worked on a number of pieces – both blown and kiln-formed – which continue […]

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How great a name is that? I first met Gay in 2001 when I was assigned as a gaffer to blow glass for her during her visit to A.S.A.P., a long-gone mini-residency program in San Francisco.

Since that time, we have worked on a number of pieces – both blown and kiln-formed – which continue her conversations among objects and processes, repetition of forms and modular multiples, photographs and their subjects, rendered again as objects. Far from being a glass artist, Gay is equally facile in executing works using complex industrial processes as well as homespun crafty-crafts. I’m pleased to have had the continuing experience of helping her to realize her ideas, and this is exactly the kind of client and relationship I think sets my studio apart from so many other production-only studios.

Gay is mounting a solo show at Gallery Paule Anglim in San Francisco for the month of February. The opening reception is Thursday, Feb 5 from 5:30 – 7:30. Here is a bit of background lifted from the show’s press release:

For over twenty years Gay Outlaw has used the camera to examine the representation of three-dimensional objects in the 2-D photograph. Over time her studio practice grew to feature 3-D artworks using unconventional materials such as prepared food. Working with pattern, repetition and manipulating the illusion of sculptural space, she draws our attention to depth, shadow, weight and proportion. Gay’s work plays actual depth against the illusion of depth, and subverts expectations given to familiar shapes and materials. Combining glass, wood, bronze, cloth, papier-maché and cardboard, her new works are richly playful adventures.

Gay has shown her work nationally, including exhibitions at the Sculpture Center in New York, the University Art Museum, Cal State Long Beach, the Berkeley Art Museum and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Her works are in the collections of the SFMOMA, Berkeley Art Museum, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, and the di Rosa Preserve in Napa.

See more of Gay’s work at her website.

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Sideways https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=101 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=101#respond Thu, 08 Jan 2009 02:03:40 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=101 One of the “new” things I’m working on is actually a design I’ve brought back from a long time ago; a simple bubble of glass that lies on its side, with a finely polished opening that allows a flower to extend from it at an angle. I made a few of these sweet little things […]

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clear prototype vase

clear prototype vase

One of the “new” things I’m working on is actually a design I’ve brought back from a long time ago; a simple bubble of glass that lies on its side, with a finely polished opening that allows a flower to extend from it at an angle.

I made a few of these sweet little things as gifts and even sold a couple of them, but it was before I had really begun to consider starting a line of products so they went by the wayside – until I remembered them just recently.  Here is a studio shot of one of the clear pieces, I will probably also make this vase in a transparent graphite blue and either an amber or olive green. I look forward to hearing what you think of it.

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NYIGF Hiatus https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=99 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=99#respond Thu, 08 Jan 2009 02:02:13 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=99 Jeff Benroth Glass will not be exhibiting at NYIGF this January; I had planned to take the winter show off so we can re-evaluate our products and how we present them (more on that below). I will miss seeing many of you at the show and I look forward to getting back to Javits in […]

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Jeff Benroth Glass will not be exhibiting at NYIGF this January; I had planned to take the winter show off so we can re-evaluate our products and how we present them (more on that below). I will miss seeing many of you at the show and I look forward to getting back to Javits in August 2009 if all goes according to schedule. We would still like to take orders for spring and summer 2009 of course, so if you’re a wholesale buyer please feel free to give a call!

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New Lenses https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=95 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=95#respond Wed, 10 Dec 2008 22:51:43 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=95 It seems like some of the most interesting ideas for new product come from explorations of ideas that have no relation to commercial viability. To wit: These almond-shaped solid glass elements, with their semi-sharp edge and hand-wrought variations, began as experiments for a possible installation in a gallery with exposed brick walls. In thinking about […]

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new solid almond

new solid almond thing

It seems like some of the most interesting ideas for new product come from explorations of ideas that have no relation to commercial viability. To wit:

These almond-shaped solid glass elements, with their semi-sharp edge and hand-wrought variations, began as experiments for a possible installation in a gallery with exposed brick walls. In thinking about that texture and wanting to accentuate it, I thought it might be interesting to make some solid elements which would loosely magnify the surface behind them. So now the unfinished lenses are laying around the studio, and everyone who comes through is transfixed by them. They love the weight, love the optics, love the irregular forms – and everyone wants one. In fact, all but one of the samples I made for myself and the gallery (granted, the imperfect ones) are sold and gone.

This studio snapshot of the remaining piece is one of the larger ones we’ve made: it’s 15″ x 7.5″ x 4″, it weighs 18 lb and still wears the remains of its “sculpture punty” (that snotty bit on the back end that will eventually be ground and polished away). I am still exploring scale and thinking about price for these so I welcome your feedback.

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Molds, molds, molds https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=93 https://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=93#respond Wed, 10 Dec 2008 00:46:41 +0000 http://www.benroth.com/studioblog/?p=93 As we do more and more custom restoration projects, we are beginning to amass a collection of interesting molds. They are a great way to produce complex forms, but mold-formed designs also require that replacements be made in the same mold, or one produced to the same specifications. One in particular that has been worthwhile […]

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venini polyhedral chandelier

venini polyhedral chandelier

As we do more and more custom restoration projects, we are beginning to amass a collection of interesting molds. They are a great way to produce complex forms, but mold-formed designs also require that replacements be made in the same mold, or one produced to the same specifications. One in particular that has been worthwhile is a mold for reproduction chandelier elements – they’re called “Polyhedrals”, and the Venini factory made a ton of them for all sorts of chandeliers and sconces. These faceted blown forms are designed to be tightly arranged in a matrix, with their broad faces aligned. It makes for a beautiful design, but one that rattles a lot when handled or shaken by an earthquake. That also makes for a lot of broken pieces, which has created a demand for replacement elements.

I decided it would be manageable and fun to build a mold specifically to reproduce these polyhedrals. As far as I know Venini no longer makes the elements, and no one else seems to have wanted to approach the replacement market for these. The mold is a simple two-part affair, cast from iron and hand-finished to the same dimensions as the originals. Some of the pieces were blown into this form straight from the furnace, while others were first dipped in an “optic” mold to give them ribs or other variations in wall thickness.

JBG mold

JBG mold

So, now we have become an aftermarket-manufacturer of near-OEM Venini components. If you know anyone who sloshed one of these lighting fixtures around and lost a few pieces, pass on our info and we’ll be happy to talk to them about getting some new pieces made.

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