Kristen Perkins• Ypsilanti, MI • Glass Jewelry

I make each of my distinctive glass beads using a process called lampworking.  Lampworking is an ancient term referring to melting glass and forming beads and other small glass sculptures by oil lamp. Glass bead makers now use a special torch to melt the glass, but the term lampworking continues to be used today for this type of art.

To make my beads, I use colorful rods of glass and heat them with my torch, which is fueled by natural gas and an oxygen generating machine. When the glass becomes molten, I wind it around a steel rod that has been coated with a clay-like mixture that will later allow me to remove my bead from the steel rod.

I shape my bead by evenly applying the glass to the steel rod, keeping the molten glass constantly turning, and allowing gravity to do most of the work.

What is not achieved by gravity can be done by using graphite and steel tools to attain the desired shape. Rods of glass in other colors are used to decorate the surface of the bead. Once the bead is complete, I properly anneal it in a kiln. Annealing is critical to the glass bead making process because it allows it to cool down slowly, which removes stress in the glass that could cause it to crack.

 

Lampworking is currently a very popular art. Many lampworkers make beads and sell them loose so that jewelry makers can string them as they wish. As a jewelry designer, I consider my lampworked beads very special because each bead is created with an end use in mind. I am a trained silversmith, so I have the advantage of customizing each piece exactly as I envision.

 

I have been drawn to the pure and natural beauty of glass all of my life. What further differentiates my work from other lampworkers is my use of clear or transparent glass in every piece so that the fascinating properties of glass become the focus. My glass jewelry is among the most contemporary that I have seen. While the colors make them fun to wear, the geometric glass shapes or silver shapes that I use to accent them make them very modern and easy to wear.

 

Outside the Lines Art Gallery • Connie Twining & Stormy Mochal, Owners
409 Bluff Street, Dubuque, IA 52001 • (563)-583-9343 • info@otlag.com
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