Powder wafers provide a new opportunity for fusers to create imagery, abstract design elements, and to give work a hand-wrought, painterly quality. They are easy and fun to make, and they fire quickly.
You can also use this method to sift powders directly onto your glass work.
We are proud to use Bullseye Glass for all of our tutorials and our personal work.
Kim Brill
Kim Brill has been making acclaimed kilnformed glass since 2005. A resident of Austin, TX, Kim teaches at Helios Kiln Glass Studio (after a career as an art director and graphic designer. Her work has won an honorable mention at Bullseye's Emerge international juried competition, and has appeared in The Corning Museum of Glass international publication New Glass Review.
You can see her work at www.FusedArtGlassByKimBrill.com
Course Curriculum
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Welcome to the Wonderful World of Wafers
Powder wafers are fun, easy and fast. Lots of things can be used as stencils: screens, kitchen tools (think colanders and strainers), paper with holes punched in it, torn card stock edges. The master of all things powder is Bob Leatherbarrow, a Canadian glass artist. www.LeatherbarrowGlass.com
Take a look at our other tutorials
We love teaching fused glass, and our students love our courses! We're always working on new lessons. We're not too fast with this: great teaching takes time.
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