The year started with a large triple glazing job in Leeds which is across the Pennine Hills from our base in Bolton. We carefully removed 57 stained glass panels form a beautiful Victorian home opposite Roundhay Park in Leeds. After extensive repair and restoration the stained glass panels were encapsulated into triple glazed units made from toughened Planitherm glass, with warm edge spacer bars and argon gas cavity to form state of the art insulated units. The original pitch pine window frames were in generally good condition so we deepened the rebates and fitted new beading around the glass units. The finished job looked great and the improvement in insulation instantly noticeable.
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I am always surprised at the twists and turns in the life of our studio. The phone rang the other day with a call from the producer of the BBC Radio Lancashire John Barnes show. He was very interested in our work and wanted me to come on the show to tell the listeners about stained glass window making and how I started in the craft. I thought it would be a good idea to not just talk but demonstrate the craft on live radio. I was introduced to the broadcaster, John Barnes, and he interviewed me between playing music. I told him about how the coloured glass is cut to shape and joined using lead cames. He was also favourable to the idea of having a go at glass cutting so after another break for music he moved from his seat in front of the microphone and sat with me at the side table. I showed him how to cut glass and make a real stained glass window just like the ones we make on our stained glass courses and classes. He was very soon able to cut some strips of glass and I gave him 9 out of 10 for a very good first attempt. “ I feel like I am on the Generation Game, ‘Good Game, Good Game’”, he said in his best Bruce Forsyth voice.
The travelling around the UK is an enjoyable and necessary part of the job with enquiries coming from as far north as the Shetland Isles down to the tip of Cornwall. With jobs coming in from England, Wales, Scotland and the Isle of Man for our beautiful hand made glass. The variety of jobs is always refreshing with stained glass protection, triple and double glazing always popular and church window repair jobs in demand. It is a shame to see the state of damaged windows but always a joy to see the progress of a restored window and finally see it back in place. All the best, Andrew, Stained Glass Designer and Artist |
We were working at Christ Church in Bury recently to repair and protect the beautiful stained glass windows in some high level windows. The damage had been caused by high winds ripping of old Perspex glazing. To get to the windows we had to reach over the roof with a cherry picker boom lift which proved to be more trouble than the stained glass repairs. The machine weighed 3 tons and had to be pushed in to position by hand. We had to negotiate our way over a high curb, soft grass, between grave stones and across the ancient Yorkshire stone paving. After much heaving and red faces we finally got the machine into position under the over hanging branches of a large tree by the side of the church wall. We then had to load up the machine’s basket and inch our way up and around the branches, over the roof and get into place between the church tower and the high level windows. The design of the building seamed to act as a window tunnel, with the gentle breeze turned into a hurricane force blast of cold air. The benefit of working from the cherry picker is that you can get to the perfect working height and carry all your tools and glass in one trip and also get to see the world from a different point of view, literally!
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We have just started work on another school art project. This time for a large private school which is in the process of building a new Junior Block. The window is to symbolise the new start for the school and is being inspired by a beautiful poem by Thomas Carlyle, “So here hath been dawning another blue day: Think, wilt thou let it slip useless away? Out of eternity this new day is born; Into eternity at night 'twill return.” I have been working with the staff and children to come up with designs for the new stained glass window and we are near to completing the artwork. I have chosen to use beautiful deep blue and violet shades of hand made glass for a morning sky which will contrast vividly with the orange, red and amber rays of the dawning sun. I also have a vision for using fusing techniques to intensify the effect of the suns rays by layering glass and heating it until it melts together. This will give a brilliant shimmering effect to the glass which will really catch the eye.
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Have you ever been out in a gale force wind so strong you have to lean into it at 45 degrees? That was me, on a church roof in Fleetwood surveying the vandalism of a beautiful Victorian painted stained glass window. I moved a piece of perspex that was banging against the window and nearly had my arm ripped of as it tried to launched itself into the air. The caretaker, who was on the roof with me seemed to take it in his stride. “We get a lot of wind in Fleetwood” he informed me, “Well known for it!”
What a busy four weeks we have had! Travelling the length and breadth of the country several times: I have spent a day with the Year 2 children at Dovers Green School in Surrey making stained glass in the classroom and developing ideas for a new window to celebrate 50 years since the establishment of the school. The children worked very hard to draw their ideas for the new window which I will use as inspiration for the new design. |
Also spent time at a local historic house, Smithills Hall where I gave a demonstration of stained glass making at the August Bank Holiday Garden Party then returned last week to run a course to make a stained glass sun catcher. The Bolton Museums Service commissioned me to put on the craft course in the beautiful surroundings of the Hall using the ‘Dome Room’ as a temporary classroom.
I had a lovely day out in Criccieth, Gwynedd, Wales to discuss the restoration of an imposing grade 2 listed hotel. The front elevation boasts some wonderful leaded lights in the arts and crafts style which are in urgent need of attention. I took time to sit in the brilliant sunshine on the beach an gaze across the bay at the ruins of Criccieth Castle which stands on the rocky headland. Then returned home via the mountain roads around the foot of Snowdon, what a sight. Stunning views across the lakes and valleys up to the highest peak in the country. |
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