Showing posts with label freeport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freeport. Show all posts

November 15, 2009

AUTUMN HARVEST PHOTOS BY LAURIE B.



October 3, 2009

POSITIVE CHANGES


Hello to all of my friends and readers! As I look at my posts from the past few weeks I'm asounded at how fast time is flying for me. I recently undertook a move from Central Illinois to Northern Illinois and am in the process of moving into a new stained glass studio location along with getting settled into a lovely home, surrounded by timber near the beautiful Galena Territory. The decision to move was a difficult one but I am confident it was the correct one. I am filled with gratitude for the incredibly undestanding clients who are willing to work with me on the lag time this move has created. A goal of mine for the upcoming weeks is to get back in the groovy with my blogging and share some photos along the way. I am currently working on two more geometric patterns and will then be starting on the church panels! I miss my blogging friends very much and am hoping they will still be here when I jump back on the "internet saddle"! In the meantime, please enjoy this photo of three new friends I made over the past month. These guys were so fun to see in the mornings and evenings and lived in the timber behind my new home. I am introducing John, Greg and Dave to my online friends! I called them over for this photo shoot and was so pleased when they complied! What a hoot...With gratitude, Laurie B.

August 20, 2009

COURAGE

Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point.

November 10, 2008

HISTORY IN GLASS 101

Photo by laurie beggin of Stained Glass Window at St. Mary's Church in Freeport, IL The exact origin of stained glass is unknown. Its discovery was suggested by Pliny as an accident by Phoenician sailors. It is possible that it was a result of shipwrecked sailors building fires for their cooking pots on blocks of soda (natron) on top of beach sand. By morning, the melted sand and soda mixture would have produced hardened glass. It was more likely that potters, from Egypt or Mesopotamia, discovered the brittle treasure independently, when firing their wares. Anyone who has painted hand-molded clay in school art classes with a variety of colored substances, knows that firing in the kiln will lead to hard-glassy coats. It is likely that the ancients tested many substances to discover which would generate the most durable and attractive coating for the otherwise dull and fragile pottery. Trial and error would have led to a glassy surface, which in turn would lead to the discovery of glass as an end unto itself. Among the earliest man-made glass artifacts are Egyptian beads from about 2700 BC. The art proceeded to the first century AD, when Roman artisans were creating glass windows, though the product was irregular and not as transparent as we are accustomed to. The rise and importance of churches sped the craft into the glorious forms that we are familiar with. At St. Paul's Monastery in Jarrow, England (founded in 686 A.D.), multiples pieces of colored window glass were unearthed by archaeologists. Although there are examples of early stained glass windows, such as those from Augsburg Cathedral, the search continues for the earliest surviving examples. Arabian filigree windows moved into Europe as the Moors entered Spain. Originally the glass, which appeared in the tenth century, were simply pieces inserted into marble or stone or glazed in plaster. To strengthen the bindings, iron ribs were added. As the colored glass attracted builders, the fashion moved farther north, into latitudes that required more substantial settings to endure severe weather conditions. Glass fragments, discovered from sites dated to 540 A.D. in Italy, include an image of Christ. Another small window, which included the popular Alpha and Omega symbols was unearthed in France and the site dated to 1000 A.D. The head of Christ became an increasingly popular image, a notable example found near Wissembourg, Alsace from 1068. As the earliest Christians, who had long been persecuted, began to feel safer, they moved from building secret spots of worship in their homes or beneath the earth, to building churches to house relics of the saints. The rulers of church and state sent emissaries to the Holy Land to bring back works of art, carved ivory, and jewels, including precious colored glass. Christian art, borrowed and advanced the techniques as the need to enhance buildings of worship came into fashion. The medieval Church became the most influential patron of the arts. As treasures from the Crusades flowed home to Europe, the need to display them in an environment of light, caused the French Abbot Suger of Saint Denis, to enlarge the windows and beautify them with stained glass. What started out as simple figures became complex and ornate with strong religious and personal symbolism, including heraldry. It is the nature of glass that led to man's enduring love affair. Glass is a solid that maintains qualities of a liquid. By capturing light, it appears to glow from within, transforming and passing light in the manner of a jewel. When created with the addition of metallic salts and oxides, the most brilliant and inspiring of colors can result, including the crimsons of gold, the deep royal blues of cobalt, the sun yellows of silver, and the forest greens of copper. These were displayed in the Gothic cathedrals of Europe, as craftsmen learned to generate results that could tolerate greater sizes and the ravages of inclement weather. In Medieval days, the craftsmen were interested in symbolic images more than realism. They employed grisaille, a brown enamel that covered the surface of the glass to define features rather than to transmit light. Later on, paler colors allowed for more light to pass, and the figures became larger, with more metallic oxides used to create colored, painted masterpieces. The art form, throughout the ages generated results that increasingly exhibited the romance and spiritualism of the human spirit. It was stained glass that united architectural elements and with the mysteries of man's beginning, journey, and attitudes to fellow men. .15hqqv. www.vex.net/~dq711/stained_glass.htm

November 3, 2008

MY EARLIEST MEMORY OF STAINED GLASS

I walked passed these two homes every day from kindergarten through fourth grade. I will post their photos here along with their history. Early childhood memories really do shape our path if we listen! I loved these homes when I was young and I still do today. Give me a barrel, shovel and stucco....I'm there!
I hope Freeport, IL will take care of these homes and preserve them for history. The photos simply don't do them justice. They shimmer in the sun and create visual magic!
Here is an excerpt from the site listed below describing the houses. Thank you to Bob Beggin and Dave E. for sending me the site! With gratitude, Laurie B.
...Freeport's glass houses, pictured both above share Beaver as a side street and are on the corners of Avon and Elk, near each other. F. A. Schulz had large flower gardens on land near these houses. He sold flowers to Chicago, and at one time had a grocery store in downtown Freeport. In about 1930 he started building these houses. His son said he made some of the glass decorations from the windshields of Model Ts and broken glass from the W. T. Rawleigh factory and S. S. Kresge's 5 & 10 Cent Store (later known as Kmart). Schulz crushed glass inside wooden barrels and used shovels to throw broken glass and rocks into wet cement and stucco. His kids and grandkids also remember not being so fond of the houses because he would sometimes steal some of their things (even toys and kitchenware) and embed them in his grotto or in one of the houses.

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"All images and content of Laurie Beggin's Glass Musings and Through The Looking Glass © 2007 Laurie Beggin, unless otherwise noted."