Great video I hadn't contemplated the possibility that you could just use this glass and make a big old window and sell it. If you could just randomly slide in a 4 ft by 4 ft pile of broken glass in a homemade kiln. Maybe try to fuse something an inch thick that would take a long time to settle in and a long time to cool. Run it in your basement heating, for a week and cooling for a week with the doors all shot and an inch thick and see what you get. If you had a house and in the winter time you fused glass bricks, with a week to heat and a week to cool on your wind power, you could eat your house and have something to show
Really cool and informative video, thank you for sharing!
Great video I hadn't contemplated the possibility that you could just use this glass and make a big old window and sell it. If you could just randomly slide in a 4 ft by 4 ft pile of broken glass in a homemade kiln. Maybe try to fuse something an inch thick that would take a long time to settle in and a long time to cool. Run it in your basement heating, for a week and cooling for a week with the doors all shot and an inch thick and see what you get. If you had a house and in the winter time you fused glass bricks, with a week to heat and a week to cool on your wind power, you could eat your house and have something to show
I was given a lot of glass. How do I tell what the COE of the glass?
There is a light and polarized film that you can use. I think she has a tutorial on it.
I have the stuff but haven't tried it yet. So I can help with that part.
@@MargaretB-im7ts thank you! Since you have some idea of what I’m talking about, you aren’t the Margaret B that is my mother! lol😂🤣😂