How Laboratory Glassware is Blown in the UK!

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
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Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @grahamnelson5376
    @grahamnelson5376 Год назад +4050

    Today we’ve learned that the line between “laboratory glass” and bongs is a thin and blurry one

    • @leebrailsford251
      @leebrailsford251 Год назад +28

      😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @loberd09
      @loberd09 Год назад +350

      I’m a chemist and in college there was an apparatus that looked like a bong. Just to mess with the prof I said excitedly “it’s a booooooooooong”. She had to leave she was laughing so hard.

    • @justinpyle3415
      @justinpyle3415 Год назад +162

      Almost any aparatus with a percolator could be used as a bong

    • @gregmottram292
      @gregmottram292 Год назад +74

      Pyrex glass vs orange juice bottle and a length of garden hose - pretty much the same (allegedly) 😂

    • @joshb2492
      @joshb2492 Год назад +53

      I gotta be frank, my b setup has some chemistry gear in it😭 all the fittings are the same and some parts work great for catching ash and cooling the smoke

  • @FrostyKix
    @FrostyKix Год назад +3295

    "We're not engineers, we're craftsmen". And bringing honour to the name, sir!

    • @dan725
      @dan725 Год назад +46

      But why not both? I think they ARE intensely skilled craftsmen, engineers, and artists!

    • @illugi56
      @illugi56 Год назад +34

      architect´s designs could not be build without engineers and engineers could not design builds without craftsmen. Craftsmen are the building blocks of design

    • @TheDevilWAH
      @TheDevilWAH Год назад +24

      @@dan725 I think this is what Adam savage has always pushed to get A added to STEM, That is should not be Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics but Science, technology, engineering, art, and mathematics

    • @samd7601
      @samd7601 Год назад +6

      Theyre magicians

    • @Fitz1993
      @Fitz1993 Год назад +12

      @@TheDevilWAH The only problem with that is that not all art is the same. You can't compare what these guys are doing to say someone who draws caricatures for a living... you know?

  • @DIYPerks
    @DIYPerks Год назад +1917

    Probably the most interesting video I've seen this year! Great to see their craft, and their passion for it!

  • @HypnotikGlass
    @HypnotikGlass 7 месяцев назад +88

    As a glass blower it’s so cool to see someone so excited about the crafting process of glass. This guy sits in his shop every day with not a lick of recognition. I bet he was stoked

    • @m-tekglass7184
      @m-tekglass7184 7 месяцев назад +25

      We was stoked 😂
      When we put things out of the shop it’s a small creation of ours that we made
      A lot of care goes into our glass
      Thanks for the understanding

    • @Mint_drake
      @Mint_drake Месяц назад +1

      They really do deserve more recognition. As a stoner, I love my glassware.

    • @OldWrench59
      @OldWrench59 Месяц назад

      👍✌@@Mint_drake

  • @xak9697
    @xak9697 Год назад +967

    As a chemist, I'm extremely happy to see that video and see how glassware is made, that's so cool 😮🤯

    • @swierda8174
      @swierda8174 Год назад +22

      Same here, I never knew. Made me kinda sad about the glassware that I have broken but value it a lot more at the same time.

    • @adampope5107
      @adampope5107 Год назад +12

      ​@@swierda8174 lol yeah I exploded a condenser once because I had the water pressure too high. That was an exciting pop!

    • @adampope5107
      @adampope5107 Год назад +6

      There's a video on att archives about the last glass vacuum tube blower for the telephone network

    • @horscategorie
      @horscategorie Год назад +4

      I had no idea this much labor went into making condensors etc... I always wondered. I will be more careful!

    • @horscategorie
      @horscategorie Год назад

      @@adampope5107 Could have been poop... nothing like testing untreated water ;)

  • @rupertmiller9690
    @rupertmiller9690 Год назад +972

    More industrial shop visits, please. The first video of yours I watched was the when you went and poured metal at a foundry. Good stuff.

    • @aaronhall7740
      @aaronhall7740 Год назад +9

      Exactly subbed just for this! Find craftsmen and get a look into thier world! Epic!

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 Год назад +4

      DEFINITELY - I absolutely love to see how things are created...!!!

    • @Sibula
      @Sibula Год назад +3

      The one where he made a chair with his dad was also really cool

    • @bobedwards8896
      @bobedwards8896 Год назад

      And longer!

    • @clivelee4279
      @clivelee4279 Год назад

      Excellent and interesting content. Thank you Alex.

  • @yourtruemomma8280
    @yourtruemomma8280 Год назад +665

    In our university every bigger chemistry facility had their own glassblower. It was always interesting to have a chat with those guys when you wanted something specific made. Their craft is unique and enables a lot of researchers to do their work.

    • @fartpunch3937
      @fartpunch3937 Год назад +21

      Sounds like something right out of a Rothfuss book. Super cool.

    • @Nevir202
      @Nevir202 Год назад +22

      @@fartpunch3937 A lot of tradecraft really is as close to magic as anything ever gets IRL lol.

    • @stevethea5250
      @stevethea5250 Год назад +1

      ​@@Nevir202 what's tradecraft

    • @Nevir202
      @Nevir202 Год назад +6

      @@stevethea5250 Cambridge dictionary online: the skills and methods used by someone doing a particular skilled job

    • @stevethea5250
      @stevethea5250 Год назад

      @@Nevir202 TY, DIFFERENT TO THEIR "CARFT?

  • @SizzleCorndog
    @SizzleCorndog Год назад +19

    I'm a chemist and I can tell you these guys are wizards and more importantly, they're keeping alive a dying art. At a certain point I genuinely thought about looking into becoming a chemical glass blower but there wasn't a way for me to really get into it because a lot of the places in the US want you to already have experience with glass and can sometimes be fairly unforgiving.

  • @flippiousfloppious
    @flippiousfloppious Год назад +586

    I used to do this for a living. Had the pleasure of meeting this guy when he came into the workshop to deliver some of his work.
    I miss doing this so much. It feels like magic. There was an old timer in the small team I worked in. He had been doing it for close to 50 years. The things he could make would blow your mind! Dude literally made a helicopter for fun. The detail was astounding and the rotor blades even spun!!

    • @DabzFace
      @DabzFace Год назад +9

      why did you stop? (genuinely curious)

    • @miclowgunman1987
      @miclowgunman1987 Год назад +19

      we have a group of glass craftsmen at the lab I work at and it is a dying breed. He isnt kidding when he says he will take anybody who is genuinely interested. There are so many custom glass tools that need to be made for science, and so few who still have the skills to do it.

    • @flippiousfloppious
      @flippiousfloppious Год назад +25

      ​@@DabzFace I was going through a tough time which unfortunately resulted in things between me and my manager getting heated and us falling out. It's a painful memory and I miss it every day. Still got a collection of some of the stuff I made including condensers like the one featured in the video

    • @DabzFace
      @DabzFace Год назад +6

      @@flippiousfloppious that’s unfortunate, sorry to hear that. Didn’t mean to bring up bad memories. I always wondered what the market is for stuff like this, I thought maybe that had something to do with it.

    • @Earthenfist
      @Earthenfist Год назад +11

      @@miclowgunman1987 It's one of my great regrets that I didn't try and get an apprentiship with the scientific glass blower at my college. By the time I realized that I _could_ have, he'd already retired.

  • @michaelroy1631
    @michaelroy1631 Год назад +220

    As a research chemist, I've had the pleasure of working at a university that employed a top-notch scientific glassblower. He used to work at a glassware company making stock pieces, and now he does custom work for the researchers in the department. It's an absolute pleasure to see this work getting promoted on this platform. And he's right - they need more people! There aren't enough scientific glassblowers to satisfy the demand of researchers. I can't think of a better ad than this video. Much appreciated!

    • @soundsofglasswork6283
      @soundsofglasswork6283 Год назад +11

      It's true there aren't enough glassblowers, but there also is a lack of glassblowing jobs to meet demand. Most just buy catalog glassware that is imported from India/China.
      Also, for research places where they NEED custom stuff, it's very common for the glassblower to need to justify their position constantly to the board instead of a lot of positions that just need to come up with a budget for their department. It's a big reason why university glassblowers are slowly disappearing in the states.
      Still remember a story that a university got rid of their glassblower, but when a German researcher was hired, he said he refused to work for a place that didn't have a dedicated glassblower. Well, they suddenly were able to justify bringing back the glassblower all the sudden that was a money sink to them.

    • @Pesmog
      @Pesmog Год назад +18

      I once worked for a company that took three years to recruit the right glassblower as they needed to be able to blow a really complex vessel a couple of times a month. Several experienced people had trials but couldn't do it to the right standard. In the end they found someone who could do it and had to put him on an large salary plus bonus plus pay his moving costs to ensure he stayed long term. Likely he was the highest paid glassblower in the UK back then and had equivalent status to a couple of experienced folks with Ph.D.'s in the company. I never did see the vessels that had to be blown, but the senior management spoke of his skills with reverence and did a great deal to ensure he was kept happy.

    • @tonymarselle8812
      @tonymarselle8812 Год назад +1

      @@Pesmog where do I sign up ? I can do everything in this video. All day, everyday . I Own a litton HSA from world war 1 that I work everyday.

    • @dianapennepacker6854
      @dianapennepacker6854 Год назад

      Suprised there aren't machines TBH.

    • @michaelroy1631
      @michaelroy1631 Год назад +2

      @@dianapennepacker6854 There are. a lot of the stock pieces they work with are machine-made. But anything more complicated - and especially anything that isn't cylindrical, tends to need human hands at some point.

  • @MereCashmere
    @MereCashmere 8 месяцев назад +63

    Shoutout to the host, what an awesome explanation of everything and super polite and patient.

  • @ParisLuHv
    @ParisLuHv 8 месяцев назад +38

    3 minutes in and i can tell these glass blowers really really enjoy teaching the craft. Kudos to those two for giving us all the opportunity to learn something new!

  • @AndyFromBeaverton
    @AndyFromBeaverton Год назад +70

    2:44 The moment in time when Alec realizes he's been making twisted Damascus all wrong and needs one of the machines.

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight Год назад +780

    I want to build a mini version of one of those lathes. Magnetically coupled sides and maybe running on a foot pedal. That's so cool.

    • @JKKnudsen
      @JKKnudsen Год назад +41

      If you plan on a smaller hobby-scale, I can recommend just using two stepper-motors. Then you can also easily do differential turning and make twisted sections. I also have a 3d printed self-centring chuck, that uses graphite electrodes as inserts in the jaws of the chuck. I have the blender/stl files if needed. I should mention this is from my mk1 lathe, I'm currently in the process of designing mk2, but that one will use a laser-cutter and wood, if you'd rather wait for that.
      Also really enjoy your videos!

    • @Nighthawkinlight
      @Nighthawkinlight Год назад +18

      @@JKKnudsen That makes a lot of sense! It's not like you need much force for working glass.

    • @tysonty5989
      @tysonty5989 Год назад +3

      @NightHawkInLight as a chemist, love your work man. The white paint video was awesome, keep it up🙌 Also ever tried using EM pulses to make plasma like you did in your rubies video? Electromagnetic coupled plasma, instead of microwaves

    • @tysonty5989
      @tysonty5989 Год назад +1

      @J Knudsen thats a good idea, what will you synchronize your motor with? Microcontroller?

    • @JKKnudsen
      @JKKnudsen Год назад +5

      @@tysonty5989 I used an Arduino with two step-sticks. And an old wah-wah pedal to control the RPM, and a potentiometer for the differential. Both going to the analogue ports on the Arduino.

  • @andrewschabbing1456
    @andrewschabbing1456 Год назад +64

    it brings me sincere gratitude to hear them say that they are willing to teach and are eager to teach. could you imagine if everyone were so eager to share their talents; we would want for nothing.

    • @m-tekglass7184
      @m-tekglass7184 Год назад +4

      🙏well said❤

    • @666Daheretic
      @666Daheretic 7 месяцев назад

      It's awesome to me because sadly here in the states a lot of glass blowers I know are stuck up "secret tradesmen" and "masters of a dying art" according to them but most of them are not willing to teach anybody anything for fear of competition. I wanted to learn but nobody in my area was willing to teach. Not unless I wanted to fork out a bunch of money. I ended up learning another trade instead.

    • @samuraijackson241
      @samuraijackson241 2 месяца назад

      ​@@666Dahereticwhich is quite ironic. On one hand, they are complaining that no one is willing to learn and continue their art (which I believe is obviously not true), on another hand, they are refusing to teach anyone who is interested in learning such art (the true reason why no one is interested anymore)

  • @roastwrangler
    @roastwrangler Год назад +91

    These gents are amazing. Not only are they incredible craftsmen, they are kind, gracious teachers. Having done a tiny little bit of glassblowing I can tell you what they do is far, far from easy. I hope folks are inspired to join the trade after watching them at work.

  • @libstertec
    @libstertec Год назад +172

    I've been a glassblower for 25 years, and watching the watching the skills of these craftsmen always amazes me. Thankyou!

    • @Gr3nadgr3gory
      @Gr3nadgr3gory Год назад +1

      What kind of glass do you blow? Venetian or pipes? Or a venetian pipe?

    • @mfmr200
      @mfmr200 Год назад

      @@Gr3nadgr3gory 😂

  • @edcglassworks5771
    @edcglassworks5771 Год назад +374

    This craft has spawned an incredible art over the last few decades and I’m proud to be a part of it. Borosilicate flame working is my lifetime passion for over 20 years now.

    • @DiabloOutdoors
      @DiabloOutdoors Год назад

      Can you make a giant unbreakable one so we can put Trump in it and send him to space?

    • @gokiburi-chan4255
      @gokiburi-chan4255 Год назад +4

      you should upload videos of your work!

    • @roamingchemist2514
      @roamingchemist2514 Год назад +4

      In graduate school I made a vacuum manifold for mixing gases at low pressures, complete with multiple mixing bulbs with valves, cold fingers for distillation, and metal-to-glass transitions for attaching gas supplies and the vacuum pump. Learned lathe and hand work with both oxy-acetylene and hydrogen-oxygen flames (for some quartz work). Some of the most fun I had in school.

    • @mitch3384
      @mitch3384 Год назад +1

      There was a news piece here in NZ about silicosis, my ears pricked up because it was a major concern (if you got lazy with respirators) when I worked in a copper smelter using silica for flux. Do you guys have adequate protection in your trade?

    • @edcglassworks5771
      @edcglassworks5771 Год назад

      @@mitch3384 it’s a big concern and a must for any glass blower to have adequate ventilation.

  • @psmirage8584
    @psmirage8584 Год назад +10

    As a Laboratory Technician with 20 years' experience, I've long wondered how stuff like this, that I use every day, was made. Thank you for showing me. Fascinating.

  • @mitch3384
    @mitch3384 Год назад +15

    If I lived in the UK I would jump all over an offer of training like that. This is pure artisan craftsmanship. Lovely work, chaps.

    • @phillyphakename1255
      @phillyphakename1255 Год назад +3

      Where ever you live, there are likely glass shops, and even if not, there's almost certainly going to be some obscure craft that needs craftsmen.
      These kinds of things, you don't learn by school, you don't learn by hobby, you learn by apprenticeship. Find a business that does obscure work, and ask them if they will teach you while you work.
      Especially if you are still young, they are usually willing to buy a lottery ticket on you turning into a true craftsman with decades of experience and service to the company, so they'll put in the effort to train workers.

  • @giggityguy
    @giggityguy Год назад +286

    I think you guys are a great team for this sort of video. You've been in production long enough that you know exactly what to look for and what to add. You are able to find people who can explain their craft in a way that you know the audience will appreciate, and let them use their own words, but are familiar enough with explaining things via video that you know when to chime in with questions and clarifications, all while filming and editing it in a compelling and approachable way.
    If the whole blacksmithing thing doesn't pan out, you have a promising career as documentary filmmakers!

    • @AlecSteele
      @AlecSteele  Год назад +51

      Thank you 🙏🏻🙏🏻

    • @Gumbatron01
      @Gumbatron01 Год назад +3

      ​@@AlecSteeleIt reminds me of the Guy Martin series a while back. Fascinating, and you can connect with other craftsmen on a level of substance and understanding due to your personal experience in a way that someone who was just a film maker could never do. Definitely keep doing more of these :-)

  • @Jullebrus
    @Jullebrus Год назад +135

    As a former lab tech, I've always wondered how these people things got made. Thanks for showing, incredible craftsmanship!

    • @74KU
      @74KU Год назад +2

      Do you now wonder why someone would waste so much time on making a graham condenser? The most useless of all condensers

    • @mzaite
      @mzaite Год назад +5

      @@74KU Nile Red just put a hit out on you for that.

    • @yackfou2412
      @yackfou2412 Год назад

      I hate lab techs

    • @74KU
      @74KU Год назад +1

      @@mzaite what a liebig

  • @Rygoat
    @Rygoat Месяц назад +1

    I could sit and watch these guys at work all day. Watching glass act like that is magic

  • @ErikPelyukhno
    @ErikPelyukhno 7 месяцев назад +4

    These guys are so warm and welcoming, explaining their process while working on pieces. Absolutely good energy from these folk!

  • @NIKKO-nj9yo
    @NIKKO-nj9yo Год назад +385

    You know what I love most about this video? Just how genuinely excited and enthused Alec is to be there watching these guys make glassware, it’s not like a lot of other “visit” videos on RUclips where the creator is just sort of present and feigning interest, this is genuine almost child like joy and wonder of a new and different skill

    • @MrKotBonifacy
      @MrKotBonifacy Год назад +3

      Yeah, I loved that "American kid seeing potatoes in the field (or a live goat) for the very first time" excitement too... I mean, very much... differently.
      I know, I'm an old grumpy knocker, can't help it ;-b

    • @truepennytv
      @truepennytv Год назад +4

      There's a great chance you already follow him, but if you want more of that infectious enthusiasm, I highly recommend Destin Sandlin over at SmarterEveryDay. He's gotten to meet all sorts of people from all sorts of disciplines and it's this same happiness and joy every time.

  • @sjv6598
    @sjv6598 Год назад +97

    Not gunna lie that’s probably the most interesting thing I’ve seen on this channel! Glass blowing is so cool! Watching how he manipulated the glass to make it do what he wants was mesmerising 🙂

  • @Hazardous-Sheep
    @Hazardous-Sheep 11 месяцев назад +3

    i just love seeing a couple of craftsmen chilling together and talking about their craft. So interesting!

  • @computersales
    @computersales Год назад +3

    Glass blowing is such an insane dark art. So much fun watching them do their work.

  • @jenda386
    @jenda386 Год назад +117

    At my former chemical university we had an in-house glassblower workshop that employed about five glassblowers. The things those glassblowers were able to make were incredible. And they could also easily repair much of our glassware if something broke which saved us a ton of money.
    They told me that pyrex is quite easy to work with. But to work with quartz, one needs even higher temperature and quartz goes really quickly from solid to completely molten. That type of work apparently requires a lot of experience to get right.

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 7 месяцев назад +2

      Having toolmakers on site who can make you weird custom tools must be such a nice thing to have in any workplace.
      And similarly, having a job as a toolmaker where people you know constantly come to you with new unique pieces they want made instead of doing all serial standard pieces must be a great workplace as well.

  • @mattsully5332
    @mattsully5332 Год назад +41

    As a Chemist, I use this sort of glassware all the time, and I always find it fascinating to watch how it's made. This piece was a fairly simple one compared to others that I've seen, and the planning and forethought that is needed to get to the end product is incredible.

  • @EMvanLoon
    @EMvanLoon 9 месяцев назад +7

    Glass is such a crazy interesting material! And then the craft of the workers. Two careers ago when I was working in a lab, we admired our instrument makers for their skills!

  • @BobWidlefish
    @BobWidlefish Год назад +2

    What a stud of a craftsman and artist! He did all that work WHILE TALKING!

  • @charlotteandavril
    @charlotteandavril Год назад +68

    I love how the artist gets excited during the episode. It's almost as if he was afraid that Alec wouldn't be enthousiastic about the whole process

  • @_boo_mer_
    @_boo_mer_ Год назад +118

    Worked in my university organic chemistry lab. Always wondered how all the glassware was made!

  • @artofescapism
    @artofescapism 6 дней назад

    Love getting to see how this is done! I work in a chemistry lab, and there is no one our lab loves more than the glassblowers we work with- it's a massively underappreciated craft, but we rely on them to be able to do our jobs, and because our jobs keep everyone else safe, everyone relies on these glassblowers!

  • @irondirigible4216
    @irondirigible4216 Год назад +2

    Nothing more amazing than watching expert craftsmen doing precision tasks. They made it all look so effortless

  • @ryasco
    @ryasco Год назад +83

    They need to get you on TV going around to places like this and interviewing them just like this. You're good at talking to people and this stuff is something I never would have known about without this video.

    • @blitzroute66
      @blitzroute66 Год назад +3

      In the age of RUclips I wonder if he needs to work with TV, bigger crews sharing income, more organisational needs, ad breaks for income and needing to fill a whole program or series line instead of little one shots like this.... When he's already got the audience here and no issues with networks etc then why not

    • @XxCENATION2011X
      @XxCENATION2011X Год назад

      Totally agree. Very personable and respectful of the craft.

  • @GPismymom
    @GPismymom Год назад +26

    This is so surreal, I subscribed years ago because I got into blacksmithing myself but after a while I realized I didn't wanna do it as a job so I became scientific glassblower and now you upload THIS!

  • @bulwynkl
    @bulwynkl Год назад +2

    My Uncle was one of the Glassblowers @ Monash Uni - This brings back fond memories of visiting and watching him work over the years...

  • @CasMcAss
    @CasMcAss Год назад +10

    absolutely loved the video! people letting each other speak and looking at an art form together.

  • @MatsGarage
    @MatsGarage Год назад +38

    Love that you are promoting and sharing craftsmen work. The world need those skills to be continued.

  • @willboudon7023
    @willboudon7023 Год назад +20

    I’ve always wondered about the glasses that glass workers wear and this was a brilliant demonstration on how they work….thank you for that!!

  • @NewLife-qj9mx
    @NewLife-qj9mx 7 месяцев назад +4

    I was a glass blowers apprentice years ago
    (tube bender)
    Glass is a really kewl substance to work with, but I can say this - it bites quickly and very hard at those temperatures, lol
    Great video, thank you all 🙂👍

  • @jensdavidsen4557
    @jensdavidsen4557 Год назад +3

    As a nuclear chemist who has worked with a custom scientific glassware fabricator...and also has a blacksmith shop at home...this is truly special! Fantastic video Alec!

  • @smashallpots1428
    @smashallpots1428 Год назад +6

    he was so awkward at the open then he started doing his work and he suddenly felt much more confident and relaxed and rightfully so i might add what an absolute boss

  • @drachenkeks42
    @drachenkeks42 Год назад +16

    As a fellow glassblower, I appreciate this a lot. ❤

  • @mreckes9967
    @mreckes9967 Год назад +1

    Of all the "how things are made" that I've watched on here over the years, all there has been a lot of them, nothing comes even close to this. My eyes thank you for this gift.

  • @astropgn
    @astropgn 2 месяца назад +1

    As a chemist, I am incredibly in debt of glass blowers. They make the science possible!

  • @batwillow
    @batwillow Год назад +5

    Great video, I have recently retired after 48 years from the trade and now I've moved home and have set up a small workshop in one of my outbuildings. I worked for a medical device company for 25 years and when they moved back to the States, I set up my own company (BioChem Glass Apparatus ran for 23 years)and my previous employers hired my own company to continue manufactering for them. I was also the Chairman of The British Society of Scintific Glassblowers for seven years. I now make artwork and consult with others to help out when needed. Regards Will Fludgate

  • @geek9642
    @geek9642 Год назад +42

    Thanks to everyone involved in making this.. a real insight into something I had no idea existed...

  • @christianhunt7382
    @christianhunt7382 Год назад +5

    this is one of the most beautiful art forms, bringing old school glass and mechanical precision to help craft the world of sciences! awesome video guys!

  • @backwoodsmodified
    @backwoodsmodified 8 месяцев назад +1

    I've been fascinated by this type of glass blowing since childhood.

  • @soundsofglasswork6283
    @soundsofglasswork6283 Год назад +7

    I've been glassblowing for 8 years. I love seeing you explore the industry. Also, the way he was breaking down tubing made me jump XD. I was taught to use my ribcage to apply pressure if needed, to avoid cutting up my hand if it breaks wrong. More commonly, with big tubing, I'd put a very small score mark. Then, I would put a small flame to one end of the mark to crack it to give clean ends with minimal cleanup. But it's absolutely fascinating to see our brothers across the pond in action!

  • @Kavouraki_
    @Kavouraki_ Год назад +14

    I love seeing other crafts. And Alecs enthusiasm makes the art so more exciting. But that is insane to see glas made like this.
    Thank you for sharing and teaching!

  • @jayflow7949
    @jayflow7949 7 месяцев назад +1

    They Are Genuinely So Happy That A Younger Person is So Fascinated & Asking Questions That Actually Have Substance…

    • @m-tekglass7184
      @m-tekglass7184 7 месяцев назад

      It’s true
      A little like when grandchildren come around to say hi 😂

  • @rominomen
    @rominomen Год назад +2

    this was such an awesome video to watch. Not only did I get to see a craftsman work, I got to see another craftsman appreciate their work at the same time. fascinating work

  • @TroyRubert
    @TroyRubert Год назад +10

    Those guys need a RUclips channel. I would love watching them.

  • @zalseon4746
    @zalseon4746 Год назад +5

    stepping out of your expertise and having your mind blown by experts in a completely different craft is such a satisfying and humbling learning experience. Wish i had the time to do it more often.

  • @Yora21
    @Yora21 7 месяцев назад +1

    Heating up only a small spot and inflating the piece with air from the inside to push out small dents in places where you can't get any tools in is such a brilliant idea.
    And totally obvious once you see someone do it.

  • @GrizzlyTank
    @GrizzlyTank Год назад +3

    I’ve always wondered how glass blowers make these kinds of detailed instruments. I’ve seen how pipes and bongs are made and that’s fairly straightforward, but I could never wrap my head around how they make coils that go inside of things like condensers. Absolutely fascinating.

  • @dan725
    @dan725 Год назад +11

    I LOVE LOVE LOVE these episodes where you’re showcasing these wonderfully skilled and hardworking everyday guys doing their magic!! You’re a wonderful host, interviewer, and presenter coupled with wonderful camera work, editing, with great music to capture it all!! I LOVE THIS CHANNEL SO MUCH!!!!

  • @arsenicjones9125
    @arsenicjones9125 Год назад +9

    I love when Alec goes to other crafts industries to visit and show off what they do. Not everything is all computers and robots. Even where those things are used there’s a hard worker keeping it all rolling 👍

  • @flaplaya
    @flaplaya Год назад +3

    Something about this art that is magical. I know these two are among most talented in world but glass blowing just seems to work so efficiently. Awesome 👌

  • @chang1865
    @chang1865 Год назад +1

    I remember going into University of Nottingham's Engineering faculty and seeing the technician make a custom glass apparatus in person for my project. They work those like magic.

  • @KENNEY1023
    @KENNEY1023 Год назад +26

    Awesome video Alec, thank you for taking us along. I found it very educational and entertaining.

  • @MachiningandMicrowaves
    @MachiningandMicrowaves Год назад +5

    Dalibor Farny's Nixie tube video from six years ago is another fabulous example of technical glassblowing. I've done some glassblowing over the years, but the effortless expertise of those guys is just joyous. Brilliant video, thanks Alec and Jamie.

  • @thomasgraham8563
    @thomasgraham8563 Год назад +1

    My grandfather was a lab glass blower in the 80s. He retired from Dow Chemical Freeport TX. He went to work for a local company that made lab glass for Dow. He also made alot of beautiful glass art. All glass ship in a bottle, colored glass roses and all kinds of other things.

    • @m-tekglass7184
      @m-tekglass7184 Год назад

      Sounds like he was a master in glass that’s for sure
      We try to follow in those steps ❤

  • @bigcrunch0169
    @bigcrunch0169 Год назад +3

    as a chemist, i´ve always wondered how these were made

  • @nafdog127
    @nafdog127 Год назад +11

    Yes! I have always wondered how lab glass was made.

  • @sweary_gamer
    @sweary_gamer Год назад +7

    That was amazing. Wish I lived in the UK still. Would definitely love to learn that. And he was clearly a master of his craft. To learn from him would be incredible

  • @jacobfluke468
    @jacobfluke468 2 месяца назад +1

    I did a class in college, intro to scientific glassblowing. I made many things, not as cool as this but I did make a much simpler liebig condenser. I loved it so much. If I lived in the UK, I'd love to work here. What a blast

  • @8leggedsquirrel521
    @8leggedsquirrel521 7 месяцев назад +2

    It's awesome to see how much he enjoyed this

  • @DirtyApronBoy
    @DirtyApronBoy Год назад +6

    This was pretty cool to see. Nice change of pace. Tools are similar but the processes are pretty different.

  • @Barrclaw
    @Barrclaw Год назад +3

    These guys are so wholesome, it warms my heart.

  • @ashadowawhisper
    @ashadowawhisper Год назад +2

    When I was in my undergrad my chemistry dept had a Laboratory Glassblowing course. A great skill to have on top of taking Advanced NMR and Advanced Organic Synthetic Chem and tons of undergrad research. Great for getting you ready for your PhD

  • @KarldorisLambley
    @KarldorisLambley Год назад +1

    "just contact me!" what a cool guy. English blokes in sheds are awesome

  • @Xorthis
    @Xorthis Год назад +4

    I've always wondered how the condenser coils were made, thanks for the amazing video demonstrating two master craftsmen!

    • @etuanno
      @etuanno 8 месяцев назад

      I wondered too, but it eludes me for what this piece would be used. Usually the coil is connected to the water in and outlets of a condenser. So that the liquid condenses on the coils and runs back down into the vessel. Here the water in and outlets were connected to the mantlet.
      This to me seems more like you want to cool down a liquid, that runs through the coil.
      Okay you could use this as a condenser too, but all the twists of the coil will make it almost impossible that something comes out at the top.

  • @your_uncle_barry_6700
    @your_uncle_barry_6700 Год назад +12

    I find people who work with glass to be like magic craftsmen. Idk why but the whole craft has always both fascinated me and blown my mind. So glad that this video popped into my reccomendations today 😮😊

  • @eyespliced
    @eyespliced Год назад +1

    One of my buddies is a Salem alum, and had a real badass shop. He has like, 3 or 4 carlisle lathes of various sizes, and makes a good living as a glassblower. He doesn't make that much strictly scientific stuff anymore, instead mostly focuses on distillation and fermentation apparatus, and heckin' expensive bongs!

  • @siamsurf
    @siamsurf Год назад +1

    Those glasses that remove the orange glow are magic to me.

  • @telemundie
    @telemundie Год назад +3

    This is one of the most incredible episodes you've put out. You have a really great way of sharing your enthusiasm through the camera and being able to focus on what parts of the process are so amazing. It's funny when I was seeing how he joined the inner coil to the outer tube at the ends, it looks SO similar to how you treat clay on a pottery wheel when you're trying to do similar things. So interesting to see how many different fields/ materials share techniques.

  • @LeighRadmore
    @LeighRadmore Год назад +3

    That was absolutely enthralling. Would love to see you showcasing more 'at risk' trades and crafts.

  • @markperkins7280
    @markperkins7280 Год назад

    I’m 61 and that was one of the most fascinating things I’ve ever seen. Thank you so much Alec.

  • @OokamiDoragon
    @OokamiDoragon Год назад +1

    Ayo for real, when I see you, I see that little bit of unbottled excitement that has been tucked away in my soul because too many people thought my curiosity was annoying. You're so amazing, Alec. Thank you.

  • @frankierzucekjr
    @frankierzucekjr Год назад +3

    I could watch this for hours. Its always fun to learn something new. Ive watched something similar to this before, it was nice that they let you give it a try as well. Another great episode. Like that huge steel plant you showed not long ago. Definitely have to do a Steele/Glass guys collaboration project. That would be awesome

  • @notactuallytesco
    @notactuallytesco Год назад +3

    Anticipating a BANGER video here as always, I love me a bit of Glassblowing!

  • @MrPePeLePuo
    @MrPePeLePuo 6 месяцев назад +1

    This guy is super skilled and passionate about his work, i love to see it. Hes basically welding and machining glass its so cool

  • @castiron_altroZ
    @castiron_altroZ Год назад +2

    Glad you visited such a generous person in industry, showing his skills, knowledge, experience and allowing you to get hands on the system. Perfect!! Keep making such more informative content.

  • @aj200415
    @aj200415 Год назад +4

    These guys are true artisan’s, not the people who throw paint at a canvas and say they are. THIS. This is true art. These guys are badass!

  • @jeanladoire4141
    @jeanladoire4141 Год назад +11

    I clicked so fast my thumb made a sonic crack

  • @Tortall2012
    @Tortall2012 Год назад +1

    I have waited so long for this to get to the top of my playlist. I work in a research lab and I see these instruments daily. Now I have a little bit of understanding about how they are made!

  • @shiccup
    @shiccup 7 месяцев назад +1

    When you put the glasses over the camera... wow that was an incredible shot

  • @inthecityish
    @inthecityish 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great to see the UK still has highend workmanship. Well done.

  • @SeanATX
    @SeanATX Год назад +1

    Alec’s enthusiasm for industrial processes is so fun to watch.

  • @ltgood
    @ltgood 7 месяцев назад +1

    Yes these men are true craftsmen. Ive played with glass and it is very difficult to avoid cracking it.

  • @MannyXVIII
    @MannyXVIII 8 месяцев назад +1

    As someone who worked with them and has wondered how such a feat is possible, I am quite pleased and in awe to know the answer now.

  • @ThiefOfNavarre
    @ThiefOfNavarre Год назад +1

    Absolute madness. I imagined work like this was done with computers and machines and it's all the more satisfying knowing it's not!

  • @georgesampson4714
    @georgesampson4714 11 месяцев назад +1

    When I was a kid interested in chemistry I would heat small diameter glass tubes in a small flame and bend them or close an end or pull out a fine tip nozzle. From that experience I can tell you that glasswork is not easy. For example in blowing a bubble it takes some pressure to get the bubble going but once it starts you have to decrease the pressure quickly or it will easily grow too big and burst. I admire people who can do this kind of work and appreciate how much time they have spent in learning their skill.

  • @jonnusofjon
    @jonnusofjon 8 месяцев назад +1

    Craftmen like these guys are absolute magicians

  • @redneckhippiefreak
    @redneckhippiefreak 9 месяцев назад +1

    I'm a artistic glass blower. I always enjoy watching scientific blowers do their thing. The techniques can be used throughout the glass blowing industy and it seems as though everyone has heir own approach to achieving similar results.

    • @m-tekglass7184
      @m-tekglass7184 8 месяцев назад +1

      It’s not how we get there but it’s getting there that’s what is important