We're
home, back from our week long workshop in Austin. We pulled into the
driveway shortly after 9 PM to find Emma the cat waiting by the door.
This is the longest we have ever left her alone having previously
parked her with our daughter when we went out of town to teach though
my sister came over every day to make sure she had food and water and
love on her some.
To
say that she was glad to see us would be a bit of an understatement.
Purr, purr, purr, pet me, pet me, pet me. She wanted to go outside,
having been house bound for five days, but would run back in every
five minutes or so to make sure we were still here. Eventually she
did go out for the night and was waiting by the door this morning
when Marc let her in at which point she insisted I get up.
I
thought we probably wouldn't see her much for a couple of days except
for meal times but she hasn't left my side, as much as she is ever by
my side, her idea of being affectionate is sitting in the same room
as you, and she is currently camped out in the old worn out recliner
in my workroom.
We
left last Friday early afternoon less than an hour past our target
time and only had to return to the house once to get something I had
forgotten. Fortunately we hadn't gone very far when we had to turn
back.
leaving
the coastal plains for the hill country
Nearing
Austin we got to see the devastation of the Bastrop County wildfire
that consumed nearly 1400 homes last summer. The air still smelled
like old soot and ashes. They are slowly cutting down the burned and
dead trees revealing slab foundations, the only thing left to tell
you a home once stood there.
miles
and miles of this
We
arrived at Helios Kiln Glass Studio in Austin late afternoon with
time enough to unload the stuff we brought for the class, check into
the motel, and return for the Friday Night Fusing session where Marc
gave a talk about the the history of pate de verre and then we showed
some slides and talked about our own work a bit.
The
next day, Saturday, was the first day of five with 8 students, three
of whom are working artists with studios of their own; a multi-media
sculptor, a mosaic artist, and a fused glass artist. Most were local
to the Austin area although we had one student from San Francisco
(the sculptor) and one from San Antonio.
hard
at work on their models
They had one day to make their models, one day to make both parts of their mold and steam it out, and one day to fill it and get it in the kiln.
Since
all three of my sample cups didn't have enough glass to completely
fill the molds, I had the students add extra to theirs to make sure,
you can always grind excess glass off but you can't add any, and all
the finished cups had excess glass. Though I demonstrated my
finishing techniques, the only coldwork the students did was grind
off the excess from the rims (or mostly) on Paul's wonderful big
loose grit flat lap.
In
the photos below, the camera was tilted, the cups were level. I just
didn't PS them beyond cropping and sizing. As usual, my students
amazed, impressed, and delighted me with their work.
In
the florescent light of the studio, this one looked blue because she
used a glass that shifts from blue to lavender depending on the
light. In the front of the studio where the windows were and where
these pictures were taken, the natural light turned it purple.
Unfortunately,
this is the only slightly out of focus pre-coldwork picture we have
of this cup as before we could get it photographed, it slipped out of
her hands and broke.