The Stained glass reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Stained glass

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Strictly speaking, stained glass is glass that has been painted with silver stain and then fired. Depending on its thickness, this stains clear glass with a gold - yellow - brown color. This appears most typically in the golden haloes depicted in church windows. In general usage, stained glass refers to glass that is colored by added metalic salts during its manufacture to create a wide variety of colors. Early stained glass artists were limited to a very few primary colors, but today almost any color can be produced.

These colored glasses are available in many different textures -- smooth, wavy, rippled, hammered, pebbled, or very rough. These different textures cause the glass to have light and color transmission characteristics that, even for the same color, can provide surprising results.

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Stained glass in Buckfast Abbey, Devon, England. The panel is about 8 metres (26 feet) across. It was designed by the monks who built the abbey.
Larger version<br>

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Example of a stained glass window depicting Mr. Punch. Created by Steve Ignorant


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Non-figurative stained glass in the Montreal metro by Marcelle Ferron

In conventional stained glass work, glass of different colors is cut into pieces, shaped by grinding and then assembled using lead, zinc, lead cames or copper foil and then soldered together to create windows, panels and/or lampshades incorporating colorful pictures and designs.

Stained glass is an art and a craft that requires the artistic skill to conceive of the design and the engineering skills necessary to assemble the piece so that it is capable of supporting its own weight and (for a window) surviving the elements.

See also:
  • Glass mosiac
Hot glass
Glassblowing
Glass bead

And Arts and crafts