Vetrofond must love orange….
So Vetrofond, our favorite Odd Lot glass maker, has come out with yet another huge assortment of weird colors for us to try out. This is what…the fifth batch? I do applaud them for listening to their customers and for really trying to put out new and inventive glass for us.
But enough with the orange filigrana, please!!
I mean, have you SEEN the latest batch of odds? Almost all oranges and greens. And ALL filigrana - a dark color covered in a contrasting lighter color, for a marbled look.
I say that with love and hope that Vetrofond will soon hear me and come out with some great new opaque purples and pinks. Actual pinks. Not faded out pale translucent pinks. Stellar purples. Not greyed out, reactive purples.
It’s true that Vetrofond is likely catering to those beadmakers who really love reactive glass - who adore making organic beads and messing with different metallic reactions. I guess I am just one of those rare glass-lovers that love plain, pure, stable colors that I can combine and layer without reactions.
Don’t get me wrong - I do love reactions, sometimes. But not with every color.
We have enough of those now, I think. Double Helix, Vetrofond, ASK, Lauscha and other makers are really pumping out the silver based, filigrana, reactive, organic and weird. It’s fun to experiment with them - to a point.
One other thing - if you’ve been buying all this new glass, you’ve probably realized by now that the paddle pics shown on the vendors web sites do not often relate to the real thing when you personally melt the glass. I’ve still not been able to get that sweet marbly pink and cream from Sweet Strawberry. Just a rusty, tomato red. Pink #3 Pastel was nothing but almost white for me. Orange Punch never looked like the paddle pic - it stayed a translucent red, no matter what I did. And the gorgeous Poppy? Hard to turn pink, like the paddle - mostly a luscious…..yep, you guessed it……orange. I am afraid to buy the brand new Jupiter - it looks so yummy in the paddle, but who knows if I will actually get that color for reals.
So…. Vetrofond? Please? A deep, vivid opaque purple. A bright opaque pink. A sweet opaque apricot or peach. Pretty please. And no more orange. For the love of GOD no more orange.




Oh heavens yes, I couldn’t agree with you more, Kandice! I received a sample pack of these same odds at Hot Time in the Mountains, and can’t get the least bit excited about putting my boro away long enough to try them out.
Purple and pink are what I crave — the blues and greens I love I have plenty of, give me some colors to go with them!
Comment by Frostfire — November 15, 2007 @ 3:15 am
I hear ya, sistah. I know there are a lot of blues but they’re basically a few colors in different darknesses. What about some really rich, cool, blues? Or varieties of browns? (I think I’ve given up on the pinks and purples but you keep holding that torch!)
Comment by lori g. — November 15, 2007 @ 6:41 pm
[...] Kandice Seeber says Vetrofond must love orange [...]
Pingback by Art of the Firebird » Blog Archive » Best of the Week — 11/18/2007 — November 19, 2007 @ 2:29 am
Oooooh, blues and browns - yes!!
Comment by coloraddiction — November 19, 2007 @ 9:02 pm
I love, love, anything orange and I dislike, dislike, anything pink or purple!!! So there. Those orange paddles are delicious!
Comment by Debbie — November 21, 2007 @ 7:01 am
Yep, I agree wholeheartedly. I didn’t even bother with most of the vetrofond odds this time around since they just looked like more of the same. I need a rich, opaque pink and a soft, luscious opaque peach. I would love to see a greater variety of tans, browns, and taupes in both opaque and transparent. I would also love a really good opaque, non-metallic, saturated purple. It can’t be that hard!
Some good skin tones would be nice, as well.
Comment by loribeads — January 10, 2008 @ 10:47 pm
I agree completely, Lori - those colors are on my list, too. Let’s hope we see some of them soon!
Comment by coloraddiction — January 10, 2008 @ 11:10 pm
What, no love for Pink #3? Ooh, it has the most lovely lavendar striations for me. But I agree that the most recent palette of vetro odds was practically monochromatic. How many different ways can you make tomato soup?
I love many of the colors from the previous batches- Grn Tapendade, Grn Olive, and of course, River Rock. Maybe vetrofond will move through the spectrum and bring us a new wave of opaque browns, cream, or blues. Hmmm. What I could do with those colors!
Comment by Julz — February 4, 2008 @ 3:49 pm