Tiffany glass is the generic name used to describe the many and varied types of glass developed and produced by Louis Comfort Tiffany, (1848-1933), one of the most famous stained glass artists of the United States; he was remembered not only for his windows but for decorative glass objects as well, in particular the so-called Tiffany lamps.
Tiffany was an interior designer, and in 1878 his interest turned towards the creation of stained glass, when he opened his own studio and glass foundry because he was unable to find the types of glass that he desired in interior decoration.
Tiffany Glass
Most people think of Tiffany glass as decorative bronze lamps with intricate multicolored, stained-glass shades, but it actually includes other glass products, including solid color windows, painted art glass shades and lamps, and flat and pressed glass. Tiffany glass pieces were incorporated into homes, most notably in lamp and window construction. The glass work was used in the homes of the wealthy, but also in public buildings.
Tiffany glass not only incorporates the color into the glass, but also tonal variations and texture, as well as use tonal variations to suggest depth. The pieces of glass were not evenly colored but were pieces of opalescent window glass made by combining and manipulating several colors to create an unprecedented range of hues and three-dimensional effects. Thus the tiffany windows look like paintings, which were therefore in great demand.
The Preston Bradley Hall dome put in place in Chicago's first public library in 1897 features more than 1,000 square feet of Tiffany glass. (Preston Bradley Hall is now home to the Chicago Cultural Center.)
Types of Tiffany glass
1. Opalescent glass
Opalescent glass is commonly used to describe glass where more than one color is present, being fused during the manufacture, as against flashed glass in which two colors may be laminated, or silver stained glass where a solution of silver nitrate is superficially applied, turning red glass to orange and blue glass to green. Some opalescent glass was used by several stained glass studios in England.
Opalescent glass is made with a combination of white glass and a cathedral color. The opacity of this type of glass is in relation to the amount of white glass used in its creation. Dense opal base glass uses a higher consistency of white glass than light opal base glass. Because of this change in mixtures, dense opal base glass is much more opaque than light opal base glasses.
Opalescent glass radiates especially deep, vibrant hues to achieve pictorial effects of unsurpassed beauty. This stunning stained glass piece features transparent enamels, silk-screened and kiln-fired on hand-rolled glass.
Opalescent glass is made in a number of ways, including as a single colour; with the pigments that give the glass a streaky, mottled, or cloudy appearance; and with or without a surface texture. It can be both a most beautiful and challenging glass with which to work. This is because the pigments are mixed into opalescent glass by hand during manufacture, with the result that the color patterns and tones in the glass are never exactly the same in any two sheets.
Opalescent glass has one characteristic that transparent glass does not: namely, that it can be seen in both transmitted and reflected light. Opalescent glass has color impregnated into it to the extent that the pigmentation is visible by light rays reflecting off it. It can be seen as well as seen through.
2. Favrile Glass
Favrile glass often has a distinctive characteristic that is common in some glass from Classical antiquity: it possesses a superficial iridescence. This iridescence causes the surface to shimmer, but also causes a degree of opacity. This iridescent effect of the glass was obtained by mixing different colors of glass together while hot. Favrile is different from other iridescent glasses because its color is not just on the surface, but imbedded in the glass.
Some of the distinguishing colors in Favrile glass includes "Gold Lustre", Samian Red"," Mazarin Blue", "Tel-al-amana" (or Turquoise Blue), and Aquamarine. Favrile was the first art glass to be used in stained-glass windows, as Tiffany first thought of the idea of making patterns in windows based shapes and colors.
3. Streamer Glass
Streamer glass refers to a sheet of glass with a pattern of glass strings affixed to its surface. Tiffany made use of such textured glass to represent, for example, twigs, branches and grass.
Streamers are prepared from very hot molten glass, gathered at the end of a punty (pontil) that is rapidly swung back and forth and stretched into long, thin strings that rapidly cool and harden. These hand-stretched streamers are pressed on the molten surface of sheet glass during the rolling process, and become permanently fused.
4. Fracture Glass
Fracture glass refers to a sheet of glass with a pattern of irregularly shaped, thin glass wafers affixed to its surface. Fracture glass is made from paper-thin blown shards or flakes of intensely colored glass fused to the bottom of sheets during the rolling process. Tiffany made use of such textured glass to represent, for example, foliage seen from a distance.
The irregular glass wafers, called fractures, are prepared from very hot, colored molten glass, gathered at the end of a blowpipe. A large bubble is forcefully blown until the walls of the bubble rapidly stretch, cool and harden. The resulting glass bubble has paper-thin walls and is immediately shattered into shards. These hand blown shards are pressed on the surface of the molten glass sheet during the rolling process, to which they become permanently fused.
5. Fracture-streamer Glass
Fracture-Streamer glass is fracture glass combined with hand-stretched streamers or strings of glass during the rolling process. Fracture-streamer glass refers to a sheet of glass with a pattern of glass strings, and irregularly shaped, thin glass wafers, affixed to its surface. Tiffany made use of such textured glass to represent, for example, twigs, branches and grass, and distant foliage.
The “fractures” are created by the addition of thin blown flakes of intensely colored glass, while the “streamers” are pulled or drawn strings of intense colors. Both fractures and streamers are quick-fused to the bottom of sheets during the rolling process.
Fracture and streamer glass is used primarily for backgrounds; the fractures suggest multitudinous leaves or flowers in the distance, while the streamers suggest twigs or stems. For this reason, fracture colors are usually selected to correspond to the colors used in leaf or flower foregrounds.
6. Ripple Glass
Ripple glass refers to a sheet of textured glass with marked surface waves. The texture is created during the glass sheet-forming process. A sheet is formed from molten glass with a roller that spins on it, while travelling forward. Normally the roller spins at the same speed as its own forward motion, and the resulting sheet has a smooth surface. In the manufacture of rippled glass, the roller spins faster than its own forward motion. The rippled effect is retained as the glass cools.
In order to cut ripple glass, the sheet may be scored on the smoother side with a carbide glass cutter, and broken at the score line with breaker-grozier pliers.
7. Ring Mottle Glass
Ring mottle glass is an opalescent glass in which rates of crystal growth have been controlled to create ring-shaped areas of opacity. The effect is a visual surface mottling. Ring mottle glass refers to sheet glass with a pronounced mottle created by localized, heat-treated opacification and crystal-growth dynamics. Tiffany's distinctive style exploited glass containing a variety of motifs such as those found in ring mottle glass, and he relied minimally on painted details.
This type of glass has a locally varying opacity; the “rings” are more opaque than the surrounding matrix. Ring mottled glass is used to provide color and image gradation that is non-streaky, or non-linear. The naturally rounded shape of each ring breaks up the more typical streakiness of stained glass. The artist, using ring mottles, can create shading and imagery unavailable from other glass types.
8. Drapery Glass
Glass sheets with multiple dramatic folds, likened to those in hanging drapes. Drapery glass refers to a sheet of heavily folded glass that suggests fabric folds. Tiffany made abundant use of drapery glass in ecclesiastical stained glass windows to add a 3-dimensional effect to flowing robes and angel wings, and to imitate the natural coarseness of magnolia petals.
To create drapery glass, the molten glass is shaped by taking a hand held roller and using it like a rolling pin to create "speed bumps" on the surface. It can also be tugged and pulled by hand using steel tongs to create the deep fabric-like folds in the surface. It is easy for the glassmakers to get burnt while making this unusual glass and extreme care must be taken while rolling the glass.
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