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Sooty streaks in clear

Started by Sal, November 08, 2007, 08:31:05 PM

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GlassOcean

Hi Sal,

They are not awful, they are gorgeous, one lampies fugly is another lampie masterpiece!!

Keep going love,

KJ.

Redhotsal

You're burning the glass. If you look at the glass with your didys on and you see bright orange "scars" on the surface you are over heating the glass. These scars will turn into black sooty marks. You can pull them off with tweezers - but it;s better to not have them in the first place.
Try keeping the glass moving - never heat the glass in the same place for very long. Try and keep the glass "blunt" - if you pull the clear into peaks you will have a big surface area relative to the torch at the "peak" and this will burn like a bugger - try and keep the glass rounded. Hard to explain.
If you have your hothead turned up to the max you are almost certainly burning the glass - I'm suprised your beads look so good(!) - I don't think I ever had the HH turned on more than halfway when I used to use one. Sorry for the backhanded compliment there - you're beads look really quite good - they'll be even better when you don't heat the bejeebers out of the clear!

Sal

Thanks for your help Sal, I have tried turning my hothead down today-waiting to see the results when I take my beads out of the vermiculite. I will try reducing the heat even more next time. As I said, it only happens on the clear-all the other colours (transparent and opaque) seem to come out fine-very strange.
Thanks again to everyone for all your help,
Sal

Redhotsal

The clear burns very easily -even the Vetrofond. Lauscha clear is lovely - really easy to work with and hard to burn.
Can you actually see when the glass is burning? You should be able to see it burning with practice.
If you have melting without burning, the glass should glow a nice even orange coloured glow. You can only really see this with didymium specs on. A burn will show up as a ragged orange streak - much brighter than the other bits of the glass. If you can see these you will have burned the glass. Try heating the bead higher up in the flame - even though it will take longer to melt you will prevent the burning.
You'll notice on your middle bead that the sooty mark is circular? This is because the encasing over the spot started off as a peak. You burned the very top of the peak and as it spread out it carried the burn mark into a sort of "C" shape around the centre. With a bit of practice you will be able to see when you burned the bead before you take it out of the vermiculite. I still burn my clear but you can often pick off the burned streaks with fine tweezers or by "peeling" the glass. You may want to pick off the end of your rod before you start encasing as people often burn the clear before it is applied to the bead.
Try to avoid these bright streaks and you will cut down on your burns. It's very hard with a Hothead to keep your clear true - but if you can perfect it on a hothead it's fantastic discipline and you'll be so much better when/if you progress to a larger torch.
Hmmm....I suspect that as you are a Sal you are naturally impatient - seems to be a trait that goes with the name! (Just kidding!)
Sal

Sal

Me? Impatient? Never!!!!!! I shall just have to try and contol myself and just take things a bit more slowly. I see what you mean about the semi circle of sootiness-it's often like that, especially when I've put the clear on in dots. Thanksyou for explaining it so well-it makes complete sense. I'll have another go later on (I still burnt the clear yesterday despite turning down the torch). I'll see if I can turn it down even more and be more patient (oh dear!).
Sal