Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I have a question - if the beads do have a white residue in the opening, does that mean they are not Murano beads?
Hi Gail! From my experience and research more than likely if there’s white residue they are not Murano. I’ve not come across any that have white residue due to the fact they were made on copper tubes dissolved in acid. Thank you for watching :)
Thanks for the input. I tend to talk slower than most so I try my best to edit things down so there’s no long pauses or “umms”. Thankfully you can watch them on a quicker speed :) thanks for watching!
Binge watching your videos .
Fascinating- thank you for your work!
Wow, thank you Olga! ☺️
Thanks for the great info. Czech beads are interesting as well. 😊
Thanks Lynn! :)
Thank you , I have to go back and watch some replays !
Thanks so much for being here :)
Excellent video.
Thank you so much Haunani! 😊
Thanks for sharing
And thank you for watching!
Thanks so much for the information. ❤
Thank you Faith:) you’re welcome!
Hi Hannah the shaped beads were not made until the 1960’s they used moulds. Your pink ones you sold were are called Spun Sommerso 😊
Thanks so much for the great info Dana! Oh “spun”, I love that!
Great info ❤❤❤❤
Thank you Pam ♥️
Great video ❤😊
Thank you Sherry!
Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I have a question - if the beads do have a white residue in the opening, does that mean they are not Murano beads?
Hi Gail! From my experience and research more than likely if there’s white residue they are not Murano. I’ve not come across any that have white residue due to the fact they were made on copper tubes dissolved in acid. Thank you for watching :)
Nice
Thank you!
You need to talk faster, I had to put this on 1.5 playback speed.
Thanks for the input. I tend to talk slower than most so I try my best to edit things down so there’s no long pauses or “umms”. Thankfully you can watch them on a quicker speed :) thanks for watching!
@@HannahsHeirloomsloved the video