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Murano beads

 
Wikipedia: Murano beads

Murano beads are intricate glass beads influenced by Venetian glass artists. Since 1291, the Murano glassmakers have refined technologies such as crystalline glass, enamelled glass (smalto), glass with threads of gold (aventurine), multicoloured glass (millefiori), milk glass (lattimo) and imitation gemstones made of glass producing beads and glasswork unmatched anywhere in the world.

Contents

Colour

The process of Murano bead-making begins with the production of color canes. The chemical compounds involved in color fabrication are extremely sensitive so they must be mixed with absolute accuracy. Aquamarine is created through the use of copper and cobalt and ruby red is achieved through the use of a gold solution as a coloring agent.

Lampworked, wound beads or Perle a Lume venetian beads

Most Murano beads are made using the wound lampworking or torch and mandrel technique, an approach which was invented by a Murano glass-master in the 1700s. [1]

The lamp-work method is the most time consuming method of glass beadmaking as each bead must be formed individually. Using a torch for heat, Murano glass canes and tubes are heated to a molten state and wrapped around a metal rod until the desired shape is achieved. Several layers of different colored glass as well as gold and silver leaf are used to produce the desired effect. After the bead is slowly cooled, it is removed from the rod which produces a hole for eventual stringing.

Wedding cake beads (decorated with glass overlays featuring roses, swirls and dots) and Venetian foil beads (with their fusion of color, gold and silver foil) are just two of the kinds of beads made using the lamp-work method.

Seedbeads or Conterie

Seedbeads or Conterie are small, round beads. To produce this tiny bead, hollow tubes of color are formed then chopped and re-fired for smoothness and shade.

Chevron bead or Rosetta

First produced in Murano at the end of the 14th Century, these beads are made of a hollow cane and six layers of glass: white, blue, white, brick red, white and finally blue.[2] After this layering of color, these beads are ground to produce patterns of five concentric stars with twelve points. The canes are then chopped into individual beads. The Chevron bead is distinguished by a red, white and blue zigzag pattern. These beads are also known as Millefiori.

Millefiori or Lace beads

The abstract Millefiori beads are created in a manner similar to that of Chevron or Rosetta beads with the exception that there is a wider use of colour and the cane is not hollow, but completely solid.

Blown Beads or Venetian Blown Beads

When the lamp-work flame was introduced, bead-makers discovered they could melt the canes and then blow the glass.[3] Today this glassblowing is called the Filigrana or Filigree Method. To produce these beads with stripes of color and spirals, glass-makers lay canes of glass down then pick them up with a blow-pipe.

See also

References

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Murano beads" Read more