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BobVila.com > Channels > Doors & Windows > All Articles > Art Glass for Beauty and Privacy Art Glass for Beauty and Privacy Glass can transform space with color, light, and pattern. Used in doors as insets or panels, art glass allows light to penetrate interior spaces while capturing the eye with colors, patterns, and laminates that make an architectural statement. Related Showrooms ETO Doors - Shop for Interior & Exterior Doors - Lowest Price Guaranteed Sears - Custom-Fit Replacement Windows and Entry Doors
Patterned and Laminated Glass Patterned glass is machine made. Molten glass passes through steel rollers impressing the pattern into the glass. The glass is cooled slowly so that it can be custom cut to size. With hundreds of patterns to choose from, homeowners can incorporate design themes ranging from geometric to natural. Lamination sandwiches a layer of decorative or high-strength material between two layers of glass. Laminating rice paper, with its wide variety of designs and textures, laminating frosted glass to standard glass, adding a colored interlayer, or combining two linear patterns at 90 degree angles give the homeowner wide selection when it comes to patterned glass. Specialty glass companies will walk customers through the options and provide them with the cut glass ready to inset in the pre-measured door or window. Art Glass and Reproduction Glass
Whether hand-made or machine-made, glass that is colored is typically made in smaller batches. Colors are created by mixing various metal oxides—like gold or cobalt—into the raw materials prior to melting. Firing alters the color, so gold will yield a bubblegum pink color when cooled. Iron oxide is used to give reproduction glass its characteristic light green hue reminiscent of older glass. Reproduction glass, with its bubbles and blemishes, is the preferred choice for glass replacement in an antique china cabinet or vintage cupboard. It also lends itself beautifully to more expansive historic renovations. Because it is mouth-blown, reproduction glass has a waviness that is not found in modern glass. Hand-made glass is not homogeneous, so it can't be tempered. It can, however, be made safe through lamination. Making it Safe Safety glass is recommended for vulnerable areas like doors. Safety glass is made in two ways, either through tempering or laminating. Tempered glass is made and cut to the specified thickness and size, then heated in a tempering oven where temperatures reach 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit. Through rapid cooling, the surface tension of the glass increases, making it four times stronger than standard glass. When tempered glass breaks, it dices or crumbles leaving no sharp edges behind. Laminated glass, at its most simple, involves a plastic interlayer that is fused between two pieces of glass. When broken, the glass cracks but stays in place, giving it the added benefit of security. Text by Joyce Carroll Artwork by Bendheim Copyright BobVila.com © 2004 |