Coloraddiction

July 2, 2008

Color Comparisons: Transparent Pinks

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 1:39 am
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Those who know me, know that I am absolutely ga-ga for pink glass.  Pink anything, really.  I’m addicted to pinks more than I am addicted to any color, and that’s saying something!!  So when a few new pink shades came out recently, I took some time out to test them and get some first impressions, and to compare them to some of the old standbys.  (Standbyes? Standby’s? Standbies?) I haven’t had much time to do any in depth testing, but I have melted the new colors enough to Fall In Love. 

The colors I will be looking at in this post are all transparent pink shades in the medium to very light variations.  They are: CIM C0915 Pink Champagne, Effetre 067 Rose Quartz, Effetre 082 Lavender Blue (aka Rosatto), Effetre 068 Pink and Effetre 082-A Amber Rose Odd.

You can see the color differences in this Pink Wheel.  While I tried really hard to get the colors right in the image, please note that colors may not appear exact on every monitor.  And the palest color, Rose Quartz, appears really washed out here.

So first, I want to talk about the new Effetre Rose Quartz.  This came out a couple of months ago, when Mike Frantz was going to send it back until someone talked him out of it.  (Rumor of course!) I think he just thought it was a lighter version of Effetre’s regular transparent pink - also shown in the wheel. 

Not true!  Rose Quartz and Pink are very different in my view.  Effetre 068 Pink is much peachier in comparison.  Rose Quartz is a very cool, pale baby pink.  I would classify it as a tint - it’s so light.  The rods look almost clear unless you look at the ends - that’s where you see the most color.  Rose Quartz has replaced 082 Rosatto for me as a layering pale pink - for one very big reason.  More on that later.  RQ makes wonderful layering over Rubino and the various shades of opaque pink.  I’ve been using it a lot these past few weeks.  It’s clarity is nice, it’s got a medium amount of stiffness, and it encases well.  Plus - it’s baby freakin’ pink!!

 

068 Effetre Pink is the classic oldie of this bunch - it’s been around forever.  However, I rarely use it these days, because it just isn’t pink to me.  It’s peach - granted, a pale, cool peach.  Vetrofond came out with its version of Pink a few years ago, and I liked it because it was slightly less peach.  I didn’t have any to compare for this post though, because I had been using 082 Rosatto for so long. 

082 Rosatto was my favorite for a long time, when it came to transparent pinks.  It’s official name, Lavender Blue, is really weird, since it’s not blue at all.  It does, however, shine a tiny bit lavender-y when under fluorescent lights.  This is why I was so happy when Rose Quartz came out.  But Rosatto is a really pretty color - slightly darker and more lavender than RQ, and great for layering as well.  It’s perfect for really berry-shaded purples and pinks in layering.  But for true pink, I love the RQ. 
 

I threw Amber Rose into this party just so you could see another medium shade - this one much peachier and warmer than pink.  In fact, I wouldn’t really call this pink at all - but a dirty pinkish amber color.  This color is highly sought after, because of its rarity.  It’s not made anymore, but if you can find it, it’s well worth the money.  The color is strikingly strange, and makes really gorgeous organic bead bases. I’m on my last rod, and I have no clue what I am going to do with it.  Maybe hoard it forever!

Last but not least is the brand new CIM color Pink Champagne.  Oh, my freaking YUM.  This color is the darkest of the bunch, and delightfully weird.  I would classify it as a medium orchid pink with lavender undertones.  By itself, it makes absolutely stunning spacers.  As a layering color, it’s perfect!  It also makes the most gorgeous floral petals when combined with opaque Dark Raspberry Pink (also a rare odd that I am quickly running out of!). 
 

Pink Champagne reminds me a lot of Rosatto, except darker and more “sparkly”.  Seriously, CIM’s quality is really impressing me.  This color of theirs has gorgeous clarity, a nice stiff consistency (but not Lauscha-stiff) and doesn’t bubble or scum like most transparents.  It is a tiny bit more sensitive to temperature change, and likes a hot flame emvironment, as far as I can see.  And the color?  Off the charts gorgeous.  The 104 coe color line has a distinct lack of medium transparent pinks - and this color goes a long way towards filling that gap. 
 

In this bead I started with Opaque Dark Raspberry Pink, encased it in Pink Champagne, then decorated it with clear scrolls. 

So the new pinks - Pink Champagne and Rose Quartz - are right on the money as far as I am concerned.  I sure hope both glass manufacturers keep them in the palette!

Fields of Joy, using Rose Quartz as the light transparent 

November 15, 2007

Vetrofond must love orange….

Filed under: A Beadmaker's Musings, Color, Glass Suppliers — by coloraddiction @ 1:49 am
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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!!  :D 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.

November 4, 2007

Tried & True: Lauscha Cocoa

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 1:39 pm
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lauscha cocoaNothing warms me on chilly, icy evenings like a cup of cocoa!  This glass color from the german Lauscha line is just like that - warm, dense and deep. It has less of a yellow/brown tone in the later batches, making it a cross between deep brown and deep grey - perfect for winter! Pairing Lauscha Cocoa with pale pinks and blues is just blissful!

The rods come in a variety of diameters - I personally like the smaller rods, as they are easier to work with.  The color of the rods is often darker than when the glass has been melted - almost black in the latest batch.

Like most other Lauscha colors, Cocoa is a bit stiff to work with. It takes a bit longer to melt than other opaques, and cools pretty quickly.  I haven’t experienced any shockiness, though.  The later batches encase well with the clears and pale transparents I have used. The stiffness of this glass makes it particularly nice to use in stringer work and raised dots.

One thing you should know about this enigmatic color is the way it reacts with other colors.  First, it tends to envelop any other color that is layered over it.  This can create some stunning effects with pale opaque shades. Conversely, Cocoa will spread like wildfire on top of most other opaques and transparents, and leave ghostly reaction lines.

Cocoa is a striking color, and will actually get paler as you strike it.  It starts out a deep, glossy color.  Striking can be a bit tricky and it takes some time to learn the feel of it.

One last thing - remember - Cocoa isn’t edible, so don’t let anyone catch you licking it, as tempting as that may be.  And I speak from experience.  :D

 

October 17, 2007

Tried & True: Effetre 081 Dark Lavender

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 1:59 am
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dark lavender Ahhh the first color I fell in love with way back when. I was messing around with 081 and its sister 221 Pale Lavender Opaque even before I was messing with pink glass.

Dark Lavender 081 is a desperately cool color - and it does magic, too! The color came out around the same time I started making beads - and at first glance didn’t look that much different than the regular 080 Pale Lavender Transparent or the totally mis-named 082 Lavender Blue (it’s pink. I swear.).

In general, 081 is significantly more saturated than the other two colors - a deep, rich lavender that will enhance any color you layer it over.

The first thing you should know about 081 is that it turns pale blue under fluorescent lighting. Just like any other lavender in any of the glass lines that I know if. There’s something weird about lavender glass that causes that reaction - I notice it happens with lavender beads of any kind - seeds, Czech, you name it. If it’s lavender, and it’s glass, it will do this weird washed out blue thing under fluorescents. But under incandescent lighting, the lavender color really pops.

The second thing you want to keep in mind about this glass is that batch matters. With this color you really want clarity - and there are some batches of this color out there that are so scratched up and scummy, that you’ll want to pull your hair out. Do yourself a huge favor and try to find a way to hand-pick the rods, or buy from a vendor you really trust. Because if you get a crappy batch of this color, the rods will scum up and bubble like the worst of the aquas - and we all know how bad those can be. Same goes with the pale 080 version of this color.

Once you get the right rod of Dark Lavender, you can create the most gorgeous, varied purples with it. It’s a gorgeous color on its own, but really can make any shade of purple in the palette pop right out. Encase Dark Amethyst in this color and watch the brown overtones just disappear. Ahhhh purple. Encase Pale Lavender in Dark Lavender for a springy pale treat. Do the same with Pastel Ink Blue and you have a subtle lilac shade.

081 is the perfect stiffness for sculpturing and for encasing - and it works well with most every other color without reactions or striking woes. Encase stripes with this and they will have an ethereal quality to them.

081 isn’t a rare color anymore - most every vendor who carries Effetre has it at a decent price point - and some even give it away as a gift when you order a certain amount of glass. Just make sure you’re getting the rods that aren’t scratched and scummy. There’s nothing worse than gorgeous but unusable glass. And now, on to the eye-candy!

moonlit magenta

totally

lavender rain

winter pixie

summer magic

October 8, 2007

Rising Star: Vetrofond 942 Poppy (aka Watermelon) Odd

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 10:37 am
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poppyOne of Vetrofond’s more recent Odd Lot selections, this color is….interesting. When I saw the picture of Poppy on Frantz Art Glass’s newsletter, I got excited. When I finally was able to order some, and saw the rod color for myself, my heart started pounding. Because - and I say this with the most maturity possible - OMG!!!! The rod color is just the most delicious shade of bright pinky-coral-glowy-juicy-watermelon imaginable.

If only the glass stayed that color when melted. **heartbreak**

Don’t get me wrong - this is still a lovely, cheerful color. But for the most part, it stays a bright coral orange, and loses a lot of its translucent pink quality. The color variances in this glass really depend on your ability to strike it. It’s VERY picky about temperature and timing.

This color reminds me a little bit of the first batch of ASK 104 Passionate Pink - back when that color first came out. Poppy shares that color’s way of responding to temperature.

The glass itself is somewhat stiff - and turns a weird sparkly grey in the flame. When you strike it, the surface can turn a murky orange brown - and that’s kind of what you’re looking for. The darker the bead when you put it into the kiln, the brighter orange you get when it comes out of the kiln. Most of the time. Did I mention this glass is really picky?

Encasing this color in any pale pink or clear transparent yields a pretty, pale creamsicle color. I love this, because you can’t get that pale of a color with most of your typical orange shades.

Poppy almost never comes out as a solid color after annealing. It usually has quite a few striations of color ranging from coral pink to sunshine orange on the same bead.

This is one of the only colors I have that I really wish would stay the same shade as the rod. Hopefully Vetrofond will figure out a way! But it’s still really lovely. Get some, especially if you love juicy summer colors.

 

poppy test beads

tangerine dreams

shadowplay

September 24, 2007

Crazy for Color - Odd Lots and More

Filed under: A Beadmaker's Musings — by coloraddiction @ 10:32 pm
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Beadmakers. Have we all gone insane? When it comes to glass color, I would say - yep. We’re nuts. Dangle a newly-released rod color in front of us and we salivate. I think it all started when Effetre released their Handmade line back when I first started making beads, a little over five years ago. All of a sudden there were these new colors out - most of them opaque - that looked completely different than any other glass out there. At least to my newbie eyes they did.

Some rods were giant, some were teeny, some were even cone-shaped. And because they were all handpulled at the factory, instead of pulled by machines, we could see all the different batches and had fun picking our favorites.

We all drooled over the new Opaque Purple, which turned out to be a nightmare for some, earning it the name Evil Devitrifying Purple. Gorgeous, but eeeeeevil. I probably won’t have it reviewed here on Coloraddiction, because I am……EDP challenged. We got excited by Copper Green and the dark version of Teal transparent. We saw a bunch of new opaque pinks, some of which were….weird (Tongue, Powder). We marveled at the new violets and the Sage and Avocado greens. We wondered what the heck Effetre was thinking when they named their new dark pine green transparent “Dark Sage”.

At that same time, we also saw Effetre’s coolest mistake ever. The enigmatic and hard to find Streaky Pink. Effetre just thought they made a crappy batch of their Dark Pink 256 (or was it Light Pink 260?)….but no. That glass was seriously cool, at least in my opinion, and led to the Streaky Pink craze, where beadmakers were buying and selling this glass online for several hundred dollars a pound - sometimes even more. I admit to falling prey to its siren’s call over and over again. I even became known online as the Queen of Pink – and probably other, less attractive names – when I began showing all my pink beads to everyone. People thought I was crazy to pay what I did for an opaque pale pink shade. But what I did with it turned out to be quite nice – if I do say so myself.

I think it was that one glass color that brought on the Odd Lot insanity we see now in the glass market. Mistakes made by glass manufacturers are now called Odd Lots - and they have discovered that we beadmakers are defenseless against the temptation of buying every single Odd Lot out there. One glass company, Vetrofond, has pretty much become Odd Lot Central to us. They release a new Odd Lot practically every hour. And the colors are becoming more and more complex and dare I say….freaking cool. They started with Coral 420 (how many batches are there of that – 20 or so?) and worked their way through to some really interesting tri-color and organic shades.

To keep up with the insanity of us beadmakers, we have seen a surge of new glass companies starting up that specialize in their own new color formulas. Since I started in the lampwork field, I have seen Vetrofond start their Odd Lots, Double Helix (which specializes in handmade silver glass colors), Creation Is Messy (CIM), ASK 104 (a partnering of Arrow Springs and Kugler), Precision aka R4 (which was primarily a borosilicate maker, but is coming out with 104 coe silver glass) and more. All these makers create soft glass in the 104 range, and are adding new colors to their line all the time.

There’s just so much more out there, choosing glass is almost confusing, and a whole lot more exhilerating than it used to be. We beadmakers are eating it up. Just look at the bidding wars on ebay that happen when a rare color goes up for sale. We often stalk the smaller glass makers’ websites for brand new colors, and we buy them out of stock as soon as we possibly can. We bug the larger vendors on a constant basis about when we can expect whatever new color that has been previewed. They can barely keep up with our demand. Frantz Art Glass now has a newsletter dedicated almost completely to new colors. We’re just out of our minds. But we’re happy about it!

September 19, 2007

Rising Star: CIM C0508 Leaky Pen

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 8:35 pm
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leaky pen swatchThis alluring shade of blue-green is probably my very favorite from the new Creation Is Messy glass color line. There’s nothing like it in any of the soft glass lines that I know of - with the exception of perhaps Bullseye. The combination of this color and the dark purple shade I talked about earlier makes my knees positively weak. Yum!

Leaky Pen is a very saturated transparent color - almost black looking if you’re not paying attention. It’s a pretty stiff glass to work with - it reminds me a little of Lauscha in that regard. It can also get a little bit scummy - but that scum tends to burn off quite well.

I’ve encased it a number of times with clear - sometimes layered over light grey, sometimes over light blue - and it does pretty well. Use it sparingly, though - because as most stiffer 104’s, it can crack if you use a ton of it under an encased layer.

This color pulls into the most gorgeous stringer ever - you can use it alone, or even make encased stringer with it and grey or blue. It reminds me of a stormy Caribbean ocean. Or, yeah, pen ink. :D

The CIM website has more info on this and other CIM colors - and some of my beads are even pictured in the Leaky Pen section.  :) 

Jewel Jeans

psyche

Mountain Moonlight

Afternoon Storm

Rising Star: Effetre 039 Dark Violet Transparent

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 7:35 pm
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dark violet swatch Effetre has been putting out new transparent purple shades quite a bit in the last
few years, and I think they finally hit on a definite winner with this deep,
saturated purple. It’s several levels darker than the relatively new Ink Blue
Violet (058V, supposedly an Effetre Odd).

I was confused when this color came out
(with its sister 041 Light Violet) - Effetre had released the Ink Blue line of
colors not too long before, and they are all really lovely. In fact, 041 Light
Violet is almost exactly the same shade as Ink Blue Violet. Confused? It gets
better, I promise.

I was actually very pleasantly surprised when I first got this color several months
ago, because it is really saturated - a spacer made out of this color would appear
almost black. But pull this gorgeous glass into stringer and you have purple at
its most royal.

This transparent color is relatively stiff - slightly stiffer than other
transparents in the same line. It’s got great clarity, though - I haven’t
experienced much bubbling or scumming at all. It also has no reactive or striking
qualities that I have seen. Just a great deep transparent color - deeper than any
of the other purples out there in anything close to 104 coe that I have seen.

Layer this glass over Pastel Ink Blue (aka Light Lavender Blue, #247) for a rich
purple. Encase that with any of the transparent lavenders or clear to lighten it
up for a great grapey base.

Effetre may be coming out with a gazillion different purples, but who cares when
they are all so gorgeous! This one is my fave so far.

Hydrangea Sampler

Mystic

Jester

September 14, 2007

Tried & True: Effetre 456 Rubino Oro (aka Gold Pink)

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 6:50 pm
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rubino swatchThis beautiful color is probably the one I have worked the most with in the last five years, and the one color I am most known for among my lampworking friends.Rubino is the basis for all things pink in the 104 coe world - with the exception of a few new colors coming out lately. But if you want to make beads with pink in them, Rubino is the best place to start.

There are as many batches of Rubino as there are stars in the sky, it seems. In rod form, they range from almost perfectly clear, to a deep transparent wine color. And you’ll soon discover that rod color is important. To start with, you want a batch that falls somewhere in the middle - most glass sellers have these on hand. The color shown in the swatch above is about what you want to look for in rod form.

Rubino is not the easiest color to work with (of course!). It’s persnickity as all get-out, and if you work with it in the flame for too long, you can completely burn out all the color. Ack! Here are some tips to start you out with - then don’t be afraid to experiment.

The first thing to keep in mind is that Rubino likes a slightly oxygenating flame, and the smaller the flame, the better. I work this color a bit higher up in the flame as well.

As long as the flame is small, you can work this glass for a good length of time - the longer you work it, the darker it gets - unless you get it too hot - then the color can disappear, or turn a muddy brown. For best results, alternate between cool and warm - almost like you are striking it over and over again.

Rubino is best used sparingly - as a base it can go cloudy and somewhat dark. It’s perfect as a layering color - it encases well, and can be used as surface decoration. Any opaque pink, white, light purple, light blue, etc. will work well layered with Rubino.

Most batches of Rubino also tend to bleed a little - to take over the color they are layered with. This can actually be used to your advantage - as dots of Rubino over any opaque pink will melt and distort into really uniform shapes. I love doing this - it’s kind of my Zen of lampworking - watching pink dots melt into squares, hexagons, triangles, etc. See some of the beads below for an example of this.

Try and stay away from the Ivory shades - they will react with Rubino to form dark orange-ish brown shades. That can be a nasty surprise when you wanted pink and cream! Instead, try Silver Pink as your cream color.

As for most of the Coral batches - they look wonderful with Rubino as long as they aren’t melted together. Too much Rubino on Coral and you get brown mud.

Rubino reduces to a deep metallic sheen - try it with some bumps on clear or pale lavender - so pretty!

Vetrofond’s version of Rubino is slightly darker and more raspberry in tone.

Lieblings

Midsummer

Pure Joy

Timeless

Pink Caterpillar

Rising Star: ASK 009 Caramel Apple

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 2:58 pm
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caramel apple swatch ASK is a new brand of 104 coe glass that is made by Arrow Springs and Kugler. They have a variety of new colors, and this one, Caramel Apple, is my favorite so far. I’ve used it several times (see the beads below), and it’s a total dream to work with.

At first glance, this glass rod is kind of a golden tan color that, personally, looks a little blah. But introduce it to your flame and watch the color bloom. It’s both a striking and a reducing color - meaning that it does all kinds of fun things while you work it with different flame environments.

It melts like most opaque 104’s - soft and flowing, but not drippy. It does tend to form color striations - and they get more pronounced the longer you work the glass. Striking the glass as you go along yields a richer, deeper golden ochre color.

The real beauty of this glass comes out when it’s reduced. A medium reduction flame will deposit a pretty golden metallic sheen on the glass - and the less oxygen, the brighter the metallic. Also, the sheen will differ with how hot the glass is when you reduce it. You can reduce it while it’s molten to get a very bright silvery finish. I prefer the more golden tone, so I let my glass cool a bit before reducing.

I know I will be using this glass a lot more in the future - it’s just gorgeous!

For more tips on working this and other ASK colors, see the Arrow Springs ASK 104 page.

Gilded Cubes

Peggy Lee

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