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  2. Glass coloring and color marking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_coloring_and_color...

    Uranium (0.1 to 2%) can be added to give glass a fluorescent yellow or green color. [8] Uranium glass is typically not radioactive enough to be dangerous, but if ground into a powder, such as by polishing with sandpaper, and inhaled, it can be carcinogenic. When used with lead glass with very high proportion of lead, produces a deep red color.

  3. Painted glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painted_glass

    Painted glass refers to two different techniques of decorating glass, both more precisely known by other terms. Firstly, and more correctly, it means enamelled glass , normally relatively small vessels which have been painted with preparations of vitreous enamel , and then fixed by a light firing to melt them and fuse them to the glass surface.

  4. Enamelled glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enamelled_glass

    It has often been used as a supplementary technique in stained glass windows, to provide black linear detail, and colours for areas where great detail and a number of colours are required, such as the coats of arms of donors. Some windows were also painted in grisaille. The black material is usually called "glass paint" or "grisaille paint".

  5. Paint by number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paint_by_number

    In May 2011, Dan Robbins and Palmer Paint Products, Inc., together developed and brought to market a new 60th-anniversary paint-by-number set. [5] This collectors set was created in memory of the survivors and those who had lost their lives on September 11, 2001 , and depicts the Twin Towers standing in spirit across the Manhattan skyline.

  6. Stained glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stained_glass

    The most common method of adding the black linear painting necessary to define stained glass images is the use of what is variously called "glass paint", "vitreous paint", or "grisaille paint". This was applied as a mixture of powdered glass, iron or rust filings to give a black colour, clay, and oil, vinegar or water for a brushable texture ...

  7. Glossary of glass art terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_Glass_Art_terms

    Feathering – creating feather-like patterns on a glass by dragging a metal tool across the surface of a newly applied wrap. Frit – crushed glass often melted onto other glass to produce patterns and color; Incalmo – the grafting or joining together, while still hot, of two separately blown glass [bubbles] to produce a single [bubble]. [4]

  8. Vitreous enamel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitreous_enamel

    The term "enamel" is most often restricted to work on metal, which is the subject of this article. Essentially the same technique used with other bases is known by different terms: on glass as enamelled glass, or "painted glass", and on pottery it is called overglaze decoration, "overglaze enamels" or "enamelling

  9. Viridian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viridian

    Viridian is a blue-green pigment, a hydrated chromium(III) oxide, of medium saturation and relatively dark in value. It is composed of a majority of green, followed by blue. The first recorded use of viridian as a color name in English was in the 1860s. [2] Viridian takes its name from the Latin viridis, meaning "green". [3]