Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Snow in Granville, VT!

It's sunny and snowy, we just got batch and a pine wreath from Spruce Pine Batch! the company who makes my favorite glass to blow!

Friday, June 4, 2010

Our upcoming 10th annual glass sale event!!

On Friday July 2nd through Monday July 5th from 9:00 am to 6:00 pm we will be celebrating our 10th year in Granville, Vermont. Can you believe it! We are very excited to have made it this far! We will be celebrating with amazing glassblowing demonstrations, refreshments, seconds, uniques, overruns, amazing sales, and much more! Please stop by and see us this summer and wish us well for another 10! Thanks for checking us out!

Friday, May 21, 2010

It's official Granville VT is famous! Check out this article in the May 2010 issue of the Smithsonian Magazine! Can you believe it, Route 100, Moss Glen Falls, it says it all and we are thrilled!


Monday, May 3, 2010

.....a new and improved Art Glass Gallery!













We have completed our gallery renovations and had an Open House to celebrate last weekend. Wine and treats were served and glass was admired! It was a success. If you live nearby, please stop in and see us. We hope you like the new changes!

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Moose sighting!!!


While driving through the Granville Gulf yesterday (a 6 mile stretch of National forest on VT Route 100, just beautiful!) my wife and I spotted a moose! We believe it was a male teen, or cow, frolicking in a small pool of cool Vermont water. We haven’t seen a moose in these parts all winter so it was a celebratory spotting! Keep your eyes open if you find yourself cruising through the gulf!

Monday, April 19, 2010

Gallery News...




Sprucing up the gallery is on our agenda this week……our gallery BEFORE….

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Hot glass...


It is a cool day in Vermont, perfect for blowing glass! Today I am making tall slender cane vessels using very thin pieces of cane (rods of glass). Much of my work is an exploration of possibilities using intricate traditional Italian cane in the Murano tradition. Each piece of cane or glass rod was stretched, cut and then fused together to create the linear designs you see throughout the hot glass bubble.