Spoon CMOG 54.1.105
Corning Museum of Glass Corning Museum of Glass
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 Published On Jan 29, 2024

The spoon is made by a combination of furnace working to create the tubing and then flameworking to form the bowl and to close the opposite end.

In Jerusalem, sometime about 40 B.C., it was discovered that molten glass could be inflated. To make this phenomenon useful and practical, manufacturing processes had to be invented. This occurred during a rapid expansion of the Roman Empire that eventually included the entire Mediterranean Basin and extended to the far eastern coast: present-day Israel. Through an extensive trade of goods and the widespread movement of people and know-how, glassblowing found its way to the Italian peninsula. It took root and developed quickly. Glassblowing spread to become—then, as now—the predominant method of making glass vessels. Learn more at https://romanglassblowing.cmog.org.

The resource is a follow-up to Gudenrath's popular Techniques of Renaissance Venetian Glassworking (https://renvenetian.cmog.org) and Technique of Renaissance Venetian-Style Glassworking (https://renvenetianstyle.cmog.org/)

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