Home Glass Hacks-Lesson 8-Sugar 'Glass' Blowing

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 32

  • @amelise4076
    @amelise4076 3 года назад +5

    So cool!! Really impressed with how long the "glass" remains warm and workable

    • @lauraquinndesign4706
      @lauraquinndesign4706  3 года назад +1

      Hi Amelise, thank you! Me too! I felt like a beginner glass blower all over again, and even had similar things happen the sugar glass that happened the real glass when I began, like the bubble blowing too thin and uneven before collapsing. It was a humbling activity for sure! Hope you enjoy it if you get a chance to try the process yourself at home.

  • @ShadowWolf241
    @ShadowWolf241 Год назад +3

    Iv been wanting to try glass blowing but i think this may be a good starting point to practice!!

    • @lauraquinndesign4706
      @lauraquinndesign4706  Год назад

      Absolutely, my students even said it was a bit harder than real glass blowing, so if you give it a go and like it, you might be a natural glass blower!

  • @ScientificGlassblowing
    @ScientificGlassblowing 3 года назад +5

    This is great! I don't think most people realize how much skill goes into working sugar. I bought a book confectioner techniques (sugar and isomalt). It became clear very quickly that I needed to stick failing with borosilicate!

    • @lauraquinndesign4706
      @lauraquinndesign4706  3 года назад

      Thank you! 😁 It’s so difficult! But I could see a lot of cross over with this and furnace glass blowing. I teach glass in a university. My students did this class during lockdown and when they came into the hot shop for the first time you could see they had more of an idea about the process and more confidence! We’re hopefully taking it forward as a way to introduce people to the techniques of glass blowing before they sign up for their first hotshop class so they get a sense of working with a hot, molten material 😁 hope the torch work is going well! 🔥 hoping to install flame working here also this year!

  • @BruhMakesGlass
    @BruhMakesGlass 2 года назад +6

    If you set up a heat gun you can move it in and out after initial microwaving if to keep the consistency you want

    • @lauraquinndesign4706
      @lauraquinndesign4706  2 года назад +1

      What a clever idea! 🔥

    • @BruhMakesGlass
      @BruhMakesGlass Год назад

      @@lauraquinndesign4706 thanks!

    • @BruhMakesGlass
      @BruhMakesGlass Год назад +1

      @@lauraquinndesign4706 I’m a glass blower so it just made sense to have an extra heat source in the same way we use a Bunsen burner

    • @lauraquinndesign4706
      @lauraquinndesign4706  Год назад

      @@BruhMakesGlass it makes total sense! Or like a glory hole for furnace blowing. I may try this next time I teach this as a workshop 😊 thanks for the great idea!

  • @toulousegoose1150
    @toulousegoose1150 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for posting this! I'm going to try this with my art students.

  • @simon20002
    @simon20002 3 года назад

    Very underrated channel with beautiful and complete explanations and examples. Keep it up!

    • @lauraquinndesign4706
      @lauraquinndesign4706  3 года назад

      Hey Simone! Oh thank you, I am very much a novice video maker but I am just delighted to share more about glass with the world in an informative, but safe way. Thanks for the kind words!

  • @kytt
    @kytt 8 месяцев назад

    This is amazing!! I took a glassblowing class a few years ago, and this would be a really fun and novel way to play with that stuff at home. Question: do you have any recommendations for if i wanted to transfer the blown bubble onto a "punty"? Should I use a different implement, or stick with the metal straw? Any idea what tool might be good to use to open up the mouth? I'd love to make little sugar cups to drink out of.

  • @pjbiggleswerth8903
    @pjbiggleswerth8903 22 дня назад

    Im a glass artist, this was really accurate tbh.

  • @vanessas2363
    @vanessas2363 10 месяцев назад

    You are AMAZING!!! 👀
    🏆🏆🏆❤

  • @seamus6994
    @seamus6994 Год назад

    Very, very COOL!

  • @norwegianviking69
    @norwegianviking69 2 года назад

    Amazing tutorial! Thank you!

  • @arturmical
    @arturmical 9 месяцев назад

    Say... If I for example wanted to make a "fantasy anime special" with this being a signature thing for a glassblower character. Is it possible to adapt this recipe to being made in the field? I gather that you can melt candies and sugar and it's ingredients outside of a microwave, be it in a water bath or just over fire in a pot but how about the rest of the process? Would a field kit of a traveler complimanted with glass blowing tools be enough to replicate it in the wild?
    Had this idea of making a fantasy elf comic explaining this process

  • @vakhbod100
    @vakhbod100 Год назад

    Is the piece very fragile? Would it break fast?

  • @bjornthebold
    @bjornthebold Год назад +2

    How do you get the residual out of the dish?

    • @lauraquinndesign4706
      @lauraquinndesign4706  Год назад +1

      Great question! I just pop a bit of hot water in it and put it back in the microwave and it melts into the water, then it is really easy to clean. Be careful moving the hot water around though!

    • @bjornthebold
      @bjornthebold Год назад

      I ended up doing that and it seemed to work quite well. Thank you for the response.

    • @vickie5394
      @vickie5394 11 месяцев назад

      Just set it in the sink with hot water. It's sugar so it will all melt off in a bit.

  • @ASTERisk44946
    @ASTERisk44946 Год назад +1

    THANKYOU

  • @chefanosh
    @chefanosh 8 месяцев назад

    Perfect, gorgeous 👍🌷🌷🌷🌷

  • @elrubix1
    @elrubix1 2 года назад

    Incredible 👍👍