Some Things Mystify Me, but That’s Okay.

I’ve decided to write a series about what glassblowing has taught me over the years.  I’m going to start with, basically, ‘dealing with failure.’  Because, if anything teaches you about how to fail with a smile and try again, it’s glassblowing.

This is a reticello.  Well, my first version thereof.

Reticellos are supposed to be elegant, this is just silly.
The first attempt at Reticello I ever made. Attempted at Elements Glass under direction of Ken Peterson. Photo by Matthew Stewart

When I was still taking organized classes, getting okay at glassblowing under direction of an experienced artist, I tried a Reticello.  For pictures of what it should really look like, we can go to the Corning Museum of Glass: http://www.cmog.org/artwork/reticello-bowl

To make a bowl like this, a glassblower must create two cups, then interlace the exterior of one with the interior of the other, causing both a ‘lattice’ pattern of color and a pattern of small bubbles between the two layers.  The steps are somewhat complicated from Point A to Point Z.

This Is Not How a Cane Pickup Should Look
This is NOT how a bubble should look, but it kinda worked out. Photograph by Marcus Griffith

This is a picture halfway through my fourth attempt – five years, two workshops, and thousands of hours of thinking / practice later.  I’m twisting the glass rods, making the cup, getting ready to put this little cup inside the other bigger cup.  The result here was markedly better:

Puntying a Reticello
Attaching a punty to my Fourth Attempt at Reticello. Assisted by Josh Hancock, photo by Marcus Griffith

And here’s where I get to the meat of things: I was originally completely clueless about what was going wrong.  Even under the direction of a true master of the craft, who had owned his own studio and blown glass since 15 or 16, I couldn’t really hold all the core information I needed to understand why things were going wrong.  One can only focus on so many things at a time, and the holes between, “Keep this on center” – a somewhat difficult task for a beginner – and, “Do not marver this so much you cool down the core of the canes but marver it enough to close the holes in the sides of the cane pickup and twist the ribs,” is wide.

If your focus is on the basics for long enough that they become second nature, you can begin to approach intermediate and advanced tasks without worrying about them.  Thus when you are completely mystified about the introductory and intermediate portions of any task – be it algebra or tumbler-making or an L-based folded leaf or circuit design or differential equations – it’s a good thing.  And if you learn to perfect a task, digging into the specifics of how to make a twisty cup or massive Structured Query Language join work perfectly, you can make something new.  I’m proud of this bowl, for example, but still see a whole lot of room for improvement.

This reticello is better, but has fewer bubbles in the intersections than I would like
Green and Gold Reticello – Made 2014, assisted by Josh Hancock, photo by Charlotte Marie Wood

Some Things Mystify Me, but That’s Okay. was originally published on Dylan Brams.com

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12 Replies to “Some Things Mystify Me, but That’s Okay.”

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