Probably not. I had to look up what that meant. I've just been letting the glass cool naturally. I need to take a class to learn the basics. How do you anneal your work?
@@lauralrobison I have a Paragon Bluebird kiln . I work with boro so the temperatures for annealing are a little different . If you can afford or get a kiln a good alternative you can try is putting them in vermiculite or kiln blanket until it cools down .
Fascinating! Now I understand why they aren’t cheap. 😀 Those are very pretty beads!
I like it, very beautiful 😊❤
You made that look so easy. I have yet to make even a simple bead satisfactorily. Always breaks taking it off the mandrel
Are you annealing them first?
Probably not. I had to look up what that meant. I've just been letting the glass cool naturally. I need to take a class to learn the basics. How do you anneal your work?
@@lauralrobison I have a Paragon Bluebird kiln . I work with boro so the temperatures for annealing are a little different . If you can afford or get a kiln a good alternative you can try is putting them in vermiculite or kiln blanket until it cools down .
@@lauralrobison you need a kiln. Or a vermiculite crockpot too cool so u can anneal in a kiln later also called batch annealing.
@@lauralrobison try soaking in water and try twisting them back and forth off. Trying to crumble the bead release
Very beautiful beads !
Thank you beautiful bead and great simple tutorial.
Beautiful work! I loved this video thank you!
Thanks for the tutorial. What did you use for your clear encasing.
These coated metal rods you use to hold the glass, can you pls tell me what r those?
They are called mandrils, and the white part on it is just a coating of bead release she put on the mandril beforehand
Hello, very interesting! And is it possible to print a logo or a letter on such a bead? Thank you!
Liked and subscribed
Try this with silver fume !
❤❤❤
wow 😘