Drapery glass
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Drapery glass refers to a sheet of heavily folded glass that suggests fabric folds. Louis Comfort Tiffany made adundant use of drapery glass in ecclesiastical stained glass windows to add a 3-dimensional effect to flowing robes and angel wings, and to imitate the natural coarseness of magnolia petals.
The making of drapery glass requires skill and experience. A small diameter hand-held roller is manipulated forcefully over a sheet of molten glass to produce heavy ripples, while folding and creasing the entire sheet. The ripples become rigid and permanent as the glass cools. Each sheet produced from this artisanal process is unique.
In order to cut drapery glass, the sheet may be placed on styrofoam, scored with a carbide glass cutter, and broken at the score line with breaker-grozier pliers, but a bandsaw or ringsaw are the preferred tools.
[edit] See also
- Architectural glass
- Beveled glass
- Cathedral glass
- Fracture glass
- Fracture-streamer glass
- Lead came and copper foil glasswork
- Ring mottle glass
- Rippled glass
- Stained glass
- Streamer glass