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  2. Dominick Labino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominick_Labino

    Labino and Harvey Littleton, with whom Labino would stage a ground-breaking glassblowing workshop at the Toledo Museum of Art in 1962, met during the time that Littleton was a ceramics instructor at the Toledo Museum of Art School of Design (1949 to 1951) and Labino was taking evening craft classes there.

  3. Bill Boysen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Boysen

    Both Boysen and glass artist Dale Chihuly studied under Harvey Littleton at the University of Wisconsin. Littleton and Dominick Labino are widely credited with co-founding the studio glass movement [2] in 1962 when they demonstrated glassblowing using "a small-scale glass furnace at the Toledo Museum of Art in Toledo, Ohio." [3]

  4. Michael Joseph Owens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Joseph_Owens

    In 1891 Libbey opened a new plant in Findlay, Ohio, and Owens was put in charge of making the glass bulbs for Edison General Electric’s electric lights. There he simplified the process by inventing a mould-opening device which could be operated by a glassblower by foot and came up with a paste that prevent the bulbs from sticking to the moulds.

  5. 19th Century glassmaking innovations in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/19th_Century_glassmaking...

    Mechanical pressing of glass reduced the time and labor necessary to make glass products, which lowered costs and made glass products available to more of the public. [32] An 1884 U.S. government report considered mechanical pressing and a new formula for glass to be the two great advances in American glassmaking during the 19th century. [25]

  6. Glassblowing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glassblowing

    A stage in the manufacture of a Bristol blue glass ship's decanter.The blowpipe is being held in the glassblower's left hand. The glass is glowing yellow. As a novel glass forming technique created in the middle of the 1st century BC, glassblowing exploited a working property of glass that was previously unknown to glassworkers; inflation, which is the expansion of a molten blob of glass by ...

  7. American craft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_craft

    Dale Chihuly's 30-foot blown-glass chandelier in the Victoria and Albert Museum in 2000. American craft is craft work produced by independent studio artists working with traditional craft materials and processes. Examples include wood (woodworking and furniture making), glass (glassblowing and lampworking), clay , textiles, and metal (metalworking

  8. Bob Snodgrass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Snodgrass

    Bob Snodgrass, Oregon DFO 2019 (Photo by Connor McHugh/Pyroscopic) Bob Snodgrass blowing glass in his VW Bus at DFO in Oregon 2019. (Photo by Connor McHugh/PYROSCOPIC) Bob Snodgrass is an American lampworker known for his contributions to the art of glass pipe-making and glass art. He began lampworking in 1971 while learning from and working ...

  9. J. H. Hobbs, Brockunier and Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._H._Hobbs,_Brockunier...

    Hobnail Finger Bowl made by Hobbs Glass Company after 1886. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Hobnail glass is pressed glass with a pattern of raised bumps. It was created in 1886 at Hobbs, Brockunier and Company by William Leighton Jr. and William F. Russell. [85]