I love y'all so much. I watch y'all's videos all the time I just started my stain glass hobby and I love it and have learned so much from you guys. Just like this one didn't know you could use more tap to fill the gaps. Thank you guys for yalls videos
Thanks for the kind comments. Those gaps were pretty exciting to fill and I wasn't sure if I explained the switch from that pressed board to plywood well enough. I hope you keep watching and forgive the amateur video quality that creeps in occasionally.
Thx for video..I was travelling in USA and hit a place where I bought these 4 3"round green plates because they just called to me to make a stained glass panel with! And then I come across your video!!!!🥰😍🥰😍
But said "No Food" on the tray. If we were building a food tray, we would use lead free solder. To be clear..we've never done a piece for food handling..except for some cupcake stands that are fused..so no lead!
I would have liked to have seen you do something different when filling in the gap. We can see the copper foil wasn't sticking because of the flux. I just I'm afraid that piece is not going to hold up.
It worked great! The foil is put on to give the solder a place to stick, the stick backing of the foil is not what holds a window together, it's the shape of the solder that is adhered to the foil.
@@GommStainedGlass I'm pretty sure that they only fit on their original ribbed glass containers. These containers were included with the purchase of a refrigerator in the first half of the last century. I love what you did with them.
I love y'all so much. I watch y'all's videos all the time I just started my stain glass hobby and I love it and have learned so much from you guys. Just like this one didn't know you could use more tap to fill the gaps. Thank you guys for yalls videos
Thanks for the kind comments. Those gaps were pretty exciting to fill and I wasn't sure if I explained the switch from that pressed board to plywood well enough. I hope you keep watching and forgive the amateur video quality that creeps in occasionally.
Thx for video..I was travelling in USA and hit a place where I bought these 4 3"round green plates because they just called to me to make a stained glass panel with! And then I come across your video!!!!🥰😍🥰😍
Well I hope you'll send a picture of your completed project, we'd love to see it..david.gsglass@gmail.com
I love things from days gone by. I would not use it for food at all. I would decorate with it especially in a kitchen window.
I totally agree!
Beautiful tray.
Thanks, it really is beautiful in real life. The patina glistens!
Beautiful loved watching the video will be looking for some great glass at the thrift stories now
Great..I hope you find some great pieces!
Love this idea! But my husband says “lead solder for a food tray?”. He’s the fun police but has a point 🙃
But said "No Food" on the tray. If we were building a food tray, we would use lead free solder. To be clear..we've never done a piece for food handling..except for some cupcake stands that are fused..so no lead!
I agree with Christine's husband. This would not be safe to use as a food container because of the lead content in the solder.
That's true, which is why we mentioned it in the video. Thanks for your vigilance, we want to stay safe!
I would have liked to have seen you do something different when filling in the gap. We can see the copper foil wasn't sticking because of the flux. I just I'm afraid that piece is not going to hold up.
It worked great! The foil is put on to give the solder a place to stick, the stick backing of the foil is not what holds a window together, it's the shape of the solder that is adhered to the foil.
Jeanne, Those are refrigerator glass lids.
Do they fit on aftermarket containers?
@@GommStainedGlass I'm pretty sure that they only fit on their original ribbed glass containers. These containers were included with the purchase of a refrigerator in the first half of the last century. I love what you did with them.
@@joelhoppe9348 Thanks, they have such great designs in the glass, nice to figure them out!
Back in the good ole days when refrigerators weren't made of plastic
@@beahendrix8023 We've been known to use refrigerator glass in stained glass panels!