With paperweights, one has to work very hot. A master will create a sphere. I'm not there yet. Mine are more the shape of a soap bubble sitting on a sponge.
The green mood persisted into the next day, which I'd signed up for well in advance. Working with Classmate's Partner, I made two full-size, long-neck vases.
Lest I think I was out of my slump, I also failed twice trying to make floppy bowls. The first one came out sort of artsy. It's for sale
here, but it might wind up in my permanent collection.
The second one did flop, I'll give it that, but it folded in on itself. I ended up giving it to Sleepless. It's the second piece with this color combination that I've sloughed off onto Sleepless this semester. I think there's a lesson here. Or a war.
By Thursday, I'd given up on the week. "I'm in a slump," I said. Our Instructor replied, "It happens this time of the term. People want to make beautiful things." GGC looked on.
"Glassblowing is like climbing a rickety stairway," I explained to her. "Once in a while you hit a rotted slat, your foot falls through, and you have to stop to regroup."
Some people had been playing with the square mold. I decided to give it a go, with Sleepless assisting me. When we got it into the annealer, Our Instructor applauded.
The top was a hair too small to fit a tea light in it, so I drilled it out. Tea light? Tea light!
III: Tea Lights!
A 12-pack of LED tea lights on internal timers changes everything.
I sold this piece to a friend and gave her a tea light to go with it. If you buy one of my
sale pieces, it might come with a tea light.
IV: A Series of Series, Part One
The assignment for our final is to make a series of three pieces that somehow go together. I was several pieces into a spiral floppy series by the midterm. In glassblowing, if you want three, make six. I had four already. Five and six would be black and white.
That row of bubbles happened early on, when, determined to keep things small, I crammed the glass into an 8 block, creating a little crease. I couldn't reproduce this if I tried.
Again with the grinding problem! Black nail polish to the rescue.
In the bag that holds my black, white, and gray frit is a color from a starter pack. It's called "Silver Clear," and Sleepless and I have no idea what it's supposed to do. Since the black I use tends to reduce to a gold sheen on its own, I decided to lie it on top of Silver Clear, with a layer white underneath to show off whatever would happen.
Nothing happened. It's Silver Clear all the way up the neck. Maybe there's a bit of textured shine there that wouldn't be otherwise. The vase is a little off-center too. I stuck it in a box bound for the student glass sale, where we let things go for $5 a pop to raise money for classroom tools like blocks and pipes.
I made a tiny vase. We hit it with the big torch. Nothing happened. Into the scrap bucket!
V: Student Art Show Audition
Because of Covid, we haven't had a student art show since the spring of 2019. That was my second semester. I'd made a large cat, off-center and torched to a shimmering gold, that Our Instructor picked as one of the dozen pieces he was permitted to submit from our class. It was then I learned that Our Instructor is fond of a certain amount of asymmetry and a lot of shiny.
There's a show again this year. We were instructed to bring at least 3 pieces, all of which had to have been made this term or last.
I went home and stared at my collection, knowing full well that my favorites would not necessarily be his. I had nothing shiny to offer, but I did have a whole lot of slightly-off-kilter threading and feathering.
I plunked them down on a table in the classroom we use for this sort of thing. Our Instructor picked them up and carried them to a photography station he'd set up. He used his cell phone, which distorted the edges of the photo and made everything look like the Leaning Tower of Pisa.
I went off to grind the bottoms of the black and white spiral bowls. When I came back, Our Instructor had made his choice.
There were forms to fill out. Everyone was hunched over their paperwork. We were all stuck on two things: our school email addresses, and what to call our pieces. I decided to call the thing "Early Spring" and list it for sale at $100. This would make me simultaneously happy and sad if it sold or not.
VI: A Series of Series, Part Two
For me, pulling long-neck vases has taken a lot of practice. Over the past year, I've amassed a collection of clear vases. They're all on a bottle tree in my back yard.
This year, I started a color tree. I have enough colored glass vases to fill the branches, but I wanted to use only transparent colors and vases I didn't care so much about that I would be upset if the entire tree were to go sideways. That narrowed the choices down considerably.
There were three weeks left of class. I knew what my next series would have to be.
Sleepless and I got to work.
Gold Amethyst doesn't look gold. Maybe I'm supposed to throw the torch at it.
Cerulean Blue for the win!
Glass Ninja left some colored chunks in the waste bucket. Classmate's Partner pulled them out and gave me one, a deep cherry red. It lived in my locker for a few weeks. When I finally used it and blew it out, the red proved to be a sort of brownish-orange.
I tried mixing the mysterious Silver Clear with Cherry Red. I wound up with neither silver nor clear nor red.
They all found their way onto the bottle tree. I know I broke my rule by putting the white one from last spring out there. Maybe it'll go, maybe it'll stay. Everything depends on whether or not I can make enough vases to fill the tree before the semester ends. And the fact that I'm down with the mildest case of Covid ever is not helping; I'm housebound and missing class all week. There are three more in the cabinet that I was planning to pick up today, but...
I filled the last three branches with the first tiny vases I made.
VII: Out in the Wild
The urge to purge started early this year. Halfway through the semester, my cabinets were full of floppy bowls that took up so much space I had to nest them inside each other. Never mind the floppy fails that had become plates. By the end of March, there were already too many boxes of glass.
As always, there are four places a piece can go. The highest honor is to wind up in one of the cabinets, or perhaps in my office. The second fate is into a box of pieces that become gifts. If I like a piece well enough to feel good about selling it, I try to
sell it. If I like it enough to take home but not to sell or look at, I mail it to my friend in Massachusetts.
I sent her a box. She did not disappoint.
An early feathered vase attempt gone wrong sat on my office shelf until I figured out how to do both. I drilled a hole in the bottom and four holes in the giant lip before I sent the vase along. Who knew all it needed were some beads and spoons?
This semester's first vase attempt is now doing work as the top of a squid-thing. With tassels!
A frog sits on top of a cherry red vase I sent last semester, which sits on top of the off-center green vase I sent a few weeks ago.
She hung a plate by a strand of beads the night a nor'easter came through. Even before the winds began, the plate was, as she said, "spinning madly." By morning, the plate was sitting in the bush below, unharmed. We have a good annealing process, and I make things kinda thick.
I'd drilled a single hole in the plate I sent her. For the two I kept, I drilled two holes and connected them with silver wire. I'm not sure how much I like it. At least they're out of the house.
I connected three so-so vases late at night:
I should wait for a sunny day and take another picture.
I sold an earlier spiral bowl to a bike club friend. He sent me a photo. Behind the bowl is a pink vase I made some time ago, and next to that an ashtray from a local pottery company of some historic importance.
VIII: A Series of Series, Part Three
While I was on the black and white thing, it occurred to me that I'd never tried to make a black and white cat.
Not having made a cat since early November, the first two did not come out well in shape, let alone in color.
The fist one looked better with the black side as the front, which was exactly opposite what I wanted.
The second one came out better, but my partner that night, through no fault of his own, brought the wrong-shaped bit for the tail, messing that up completely.
For these two, I'd put white frit on the core bubble, then layered black onto the clear gather over it. What if, I wondered, I put the black and white together on the core?
Sleepless and I were both working with black that night, and we were both coming out on the losing end.
Black is soft. White is stiff. When I put air into it, the black blew out and the white stayed put. I ought to have seen that coming, but I didn't. I got the whole thing hot and used wet newspaper to cool the black side as I put air into the piece. That straightened it out enough that I decided to proceed.
In the end, I got a mama cat, black and white on the front, gray on the back.
If I could make some passable kittens, I'd have another series.
I went back to the method I'd started with, this time being more judicious about my application of black. I got one kitten finished on Thursday:
On Saturday, I subbed for someone down with Covid (the irony!*) and made another cat. Here it is in the annealer. The tail tip is weird, but kittens are weird anyway.
On my way out of the classroom, I noticed that our flower, which broke from the stem a year ago, had come out of our vase.
I put it back in.
(*The university contact tracers are having me go back to Saturday as a possible source. We'll never know.)