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Before You Begin
Consider first your goals for the type of beadmaking class you
want to take:
Do you already know that beadmaking is something you absolutely want
to do? In that case, you will want to look for a comprehensive
beginning class that gives you a good grounding in safety and
technique over the course of several days. With a knowledgeable and
experienced instructor, this type of class is the wisest investment
of time and money you could make. But some people aren’t quite sure
if beadmaking is going to be their “cup of tea”…
It could be that what you want first is a quick overview of the
safety issues, costs and equipment involved, and the experience of
making a few beads. If you aren’t sure that you want to commit the
time and money to beadmaking, this type of class can give you a feel
for whether you like it, are good enough at it, and feel comfortable
enough to pursue it further. This is what we call an “Introduction
to Beadmaking”.
An introductory class can be accomplished by 3 – 4 hours of
one-on-one instruction with a knowledgeable teacher, or a full day
(6 – 8 hours) in a class with other students. Regardless of whether
you get your introduction to beadmaking individually, or in a class
with others, you should try to find an experienced instructor who
will cover basic safety information about the torch, equipment and
proper handling of the fuels/gases that you will be using. However,
please understand that a three to six hour introductory class is not
an adequate substitute for a comprehensive beginner’s class.
Once you’ve taken an “Introduction”, it’s very possible that you’ll
join the ranks of the glass obsessed: you won’t be able to stop
thinking about melting glass, you’ll find yourself making beads in
your head before you drift off to sleep at night, and you’ll be
considering where to set up your torch. Now is the time when you
need to start looking for a comprehensive course in beginning
beadmaking: Do this before you set up your beadmaking studio -
you’ll receive lots of useful information in a comprehensive class
that can help you make safe and appropriate equipment and set-up
choices based on your individual situation.
How to find a good class:
Take the time to do your research, and don’t be afraid to ask
questions. Here are some of the questions you can and should ask the
teacher or group sponsoring the class:
* Who is teaching the class?
* How much experience does this instructor have?
Not all well-known beadmakers are great teachers, and not all great
teachers will be particularly gifted beadmakers. However, a
beadmaking instructor should have sufficient knowledge and technical
proficiency in making beads to allow them to answer any questions a
beginner will have. This includes guiding students through
understanding the all-important safety issues, basic beadmaking
techniques, the physical and chemical properties of glass, using and
maintaining your equipment and setting up a beadmaking studio, based
on their knowledge of and experience with hot glass.
Unfortunately, it’s difficult to measure a person’s beadmaking
experience in months and years, because not many people make beads
as a full time job. Gaining experience in hot glass is a cumulative
exercise; advanced skill levels and understanding are reached only
after many hours of continuous practice. This is why someone who
makes beads for a couple of hours on weekends for three years might
not have achieved the proficiency and skill level of another
beadmaker who devotes 20+ hours a week, but has only been doing it
for a year. So, although there will always be exceptions to the
rule, a good rule of thumb regarding how much experience a
beadmaking instructor should have is at least two to three years’
experience in making beads, before teaching others.
No matter how gifted a teacher someone is, or how kind and patient
they seem, where beadmaking instruction in concerned, there is no
substitute for being taught by someone with actual long-term
experience creating beads out of hot glass.
Helpful questions to ask when looking for a qualified instructor:
Ask how long your instructor has been working in hot glass, and
whether or not that’s full time, part-time or just as a weekend
hobby.
Ask how long they have been teaching.
Ask who the instructor has studied with, or taken beadmaking classes
from.
Ask to see pictures of the instructor’s beads.
Ask if the instructor has attended the ISGB Instructor’s Seminar.
(And if not, please suggest that they do so!)
Ask for recommendations of good instructors from other beadmakers.
* How many hours of instruction will you receive?
A comprehensive beginning beadmaking class should be no less than 12
hours of instruction,regardless of whether that is over the course
of several days or evenings, or in two consecutive days. Listed
below is a basic outline of what should be covered in a beginning
class. Even if you are receiving individual instruction, it is just
not possible to cover everything you need to know about safety,
equipment, glass properties, annealing and technique in a few hours
time, and still allow time for questions, adequate supervised
practice at the torch, and feedback for all the students from the
instructor.
* How many people (at most) will be in the class?
For safety’s sake, there should be no more than 6 people in a
beginning class with one instructor. If there is an experienced
teaching assistant there to help supervise students when they are
working on torches, the number of students should still be no more
than 10. Regardless of how good a teacher is, a room full of
beginners who have never worked at a torch with hot glass need to be
carefully supervised, for everyone’s safety.
* Will there be a torch for every student?
Part of what you want to get out of a beginning beadmaking class is
time on a torch. In a 12-hr class at least 4 to 5 hours of that
should be spent on a torch. If not enough torches are available to
go around, then the class should be longer to make up for this fact.
Each student should get at least 4 hours of practice time on a
torch.
* What type of torch will you be learning on?
There are generally two types of torches used to teach beadmaking: a
single fuel torch, (such as a Hothead, Fireworks, or Quiet torch),
and a mixed gas (propane/oxygen) torch (such as the Minor Bench
Burner, Carlyle mini, GTT Bobcat, or others). A single fuel torch
generally uses MAPP gas (or propylene) and does not require a major
commitment of money or space to use it. It is however, noisy, can
produce soot in the glass if not used properly, and melts the glass
more slowly than a mixed gas torch. This is often considered a
benefit for a beginner, because it will mean more control over the
glass.
A mixed gas torch uses propane as the fuel, and oxygen as an
oxidizer, which produce a very hot, quiet, adjustable flame. This
type of torch does require a permanent set-up and a greater outlay
of money for equipment and supplies. Both torches are fine to learn
on; however, if you wish to get into beadmaking as a full time
occupation, you will probably be investing in a mixed gas torch
sooner or later, and may prefer to learn on one initially.
* Does either the instructor or the class sponsor carry liability
insurance?
When appropriate safety precautions are taken, glass beadmaking is
no more dangerous than driving a car. However, you wouldn’t want to
be traveling along a highway surrounded by Driver’s Ed cars with
learners behind the wheel, none of whom carried insurance, would
you? In all probability, nothing bad will happen…. Right?
The risk might be slight, but the danger is no less real.
At this point in time, instructors in the beadmaking community are
starting to realize the importance of carrying liability insurance,
in order to protect themselves and their students should an accident
happen. Unfortunately, it can be very costly, and in some
circumstances, not available to everyone who teaches. Thus it is
usually the exception rather than the norm. The ISGB is attempting
to address this issue for instructors, but we’re still looking for
workable solutions.
In a perfect world, every instructor or sponsoring organization
would carry liability insurance against any accidents that might
happen in a room full of beginners, working with hot glass and open
flames. In reality, you may have a hard time finding an instructor
who carries this type of insurance. (But that doesn’t mean you
shouldn’t ask!)
It is our hope that liability insurance will become more reasonably
available soon, and that having it before starting to teach will
become an accepted practice for all instructors and teaching venues
in the not too distant future. Liability insurance is a good
investment to protect all parties involved in a beadmaking class.
Your safety is your responsibility:
It is up to you to weigh the risks and do what feels most
comfortable to you.
Recognize that you may have to travel some distance to receive
proper instruction in making glass beads. It’s better to wait and
plan to take a safe and comprehensive class from a knowledgeable
instructor, that will give you what you need to start your journey
as a beadmaker, than to waste time and money on an incomplete,
frustrating or dangerous experience.
And a few other questions that you may also want to ask:
Does the cost of the class cover all the materials, glass, supplies
and equipment you will be using?
Will a class outline be distributed, so you can concentrate on
watching the instructor demo, rather than taking notes?
Will there be any supplemental handouts or reference materials given
to you at the end of class?
Will your beads from the class be annealed; How / when will you get
them?
Once glass has been melted, it needs to “soak” at a certain
temperature for a specific amount of time, and then be cooled slowly
in a precise manner only possible with a kiln. This is just not
possible using a fiber blanket or vermiculite. If your beads from
class have not been annealed during the class, it is often possible
to “batch anneal” them later, but some of them may crack or break
due to unrelieved stress in the glass.
What constitutes a “safe” beadmaking class environment?
* Ask about the actual classroom space where your class will take
place:
There should be adequate ventilation for the size of the room.
Proper ventilation requires three things: A way to remove stale air
or fumes from the work area (preferably vented to the outside),
clean make-up air brought into the work area, and a method of
keeping the air circulating in the room. A fan and an open window
are not sufficient if there are several torches turned on at the
same time. All torches pull oxygen from the air for combustion,
exhausting the room’s fresh air supply more quickly and release
harmful combustion gases that can build up in a poorly ventilated
workspace.
Without proper ventilation, after a long day hunched over a torch,
you might experience headaches, dizziness, tightness in your chest,
and other mild, but worrisome, symptoms. If so, turn off your torch,
tell the instructor, and go outside for some fresh air.
Every student should be provided with proper safety glasses: Clear
plastic “science class” goggles or sunglasses will protect your eyes
from flying glass but not from the potentially damaging light coming
off the flame and the hot glass. Student safety glasses should have
a rose didymium or stronger filter on the lenses. (The lens will be
dark purple/gray.)
The workspace near the torches should be clear of
flammable/combustible materials, because flying chips of hot glass
can travel a good distance.
Torches should be securely attached to the tabletop, and matches,
flint strikers or electronic arc lighters should be provided for
lighting the torch. (Not butane lighters.)
The floor and tabletop should be heatproof. (Metal or tile, etc.)
The instructor or class sponsor should let you know ahead of time
about appropriate clothing safety issues: Long hair should be tied
back, you should wear long sleeved, cotton or natural fiber clothing
(polyester melts; need we say more?), and no shorts, plunging
necklines or open toed sandals… just in case. Long artificial nails
can sometimes pose a hazard for beginners.
A Few Words of Wisdom for Teachers and Students:
The Role of Copying and Artistic Integrity in the Classroom
Copying
Copying and repetition are an integral part of the learning process.
Don’t be afraid to take what your instructor has demonstrated in
class, and practice, practice, practice it at home. Instructors
shouldn’t be demonstrating any techniques that they don’t want their
students copying; nothing learned in class should be off limits to
the students who paid for the instruction.
Artistic Integrity
Once you set up your studio and start making beads in earnest, it’s
important to try to begin to “find your own voice” in the beads you
make, and not continue to copy the exact beads that you have learned
from your instructor. When you have a bead that you really like, but
you have learned from someone else, try to assess what it is that
appeals to you about it, and then take that idea, technique, or
color scheme, and play with it.
A common occurrence in beadmaking classes is students bringing in
beads that they are intrigued with, to ask their instructor how a
certain look was achieved. If the technique is a simple or common
one, most instructors will be happy to demonstrate, if time permits.
Please respect the artistic integrity of other beadmakers, and don’t
ask your instructor to speculate or show you how another beadmaker
achieves something that makes their work uniquely their own.
This article has been excerpted from the ISGB Educational Standards
Page. The full text may be seen
HERE
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