Fused Glass Memorial Windchime - Honor Your Loved One 1
Fused Glass Memorial Windchime - Honor Your Loved One 2
Fused Glass Memorial Windchime - Honor Your Loved One 3
Fused Glass Memorial Windchime - Honor Your Loved One 4
Fused Glass Memorial Windchime - Honor Your Loved One 5

Fused Glass Memorial Windchime - Honor Your Loved One

$175

This Windchime was the result of brainstorming between the client and myself regarding what format the "memorial' would take. The piece was intended to honor the life of a young artist, as a gift to her brother. The client didn't know exactly what she wanted, but provided me with the small sketch of the heart logo used in the deceased artist's work. I immediately recognized the drawing as that of an anatomical heart; that is when my intuition took over regarding how to infuse this piece with the energy of the person it was meant to honor. Asymmetry, bold patterns and sound via a windchime mounted from the bottom all added up to memoriam guaranteed to be treasured (once the tears stopped flowing). Adding the chime at the bottom was a nod from my intuitive side; I believe that the spirit never dies and is only a thought away. When the chimes gently sing, the recipient will be recall the person who this piece honors (and maybe she will call him!) A special twist within this project arose because the piece was originally intended as an xmas gift; since there was not time to create the entire piece before the holiday, I imagined how "something" could be gifted by the date, with the entire piece to follow. I was inspired by the saying "when you left you took a piece of my heart"; I cut the "piece" in the form of a jigsaw puzzle for two reasons. First, because it was FUN - fun to present the recipient with a small pink polka dot piece of glass in the shape of a puzzle pieceā€¦ what the heck is that? Second, because the sudden death of this young lady left so many questions - how would her life have gone had she been able to continue - would she have children? Where would she live? Would her artwork become nationally/internationally known? The ample "latitude" given by the client in this project allowed it to manifest into a singular pieceā€¦close your eyes and open your mind - that is where the extraordinary dwells! See Janice's review!

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Karla Ely

Karla Ely

Karla Ely Glass

Pahrump, NV
Member since: 2012
5.0
11 Maker Reviews
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The mainstay of my shop is fused glass creationsā€¦. this can be a stand alone piece of glass, a mixed media composition (sculptural or wall-hung), or a functional piece of work (light fixtures, plates/trays/bowls,inserts for doors or cabinets, etc).

I most enjoy making custom pieces for folksā€¦ Because I am intuitive, after a short conversation I am able to "get that person" and design a piece that is "theirs".

While many glass artists began with stained glass and later transitioned to fused work, I have 20 years experience working in fused glass. I prefer fused glass for the following reasons:

  • it is STRONGER than stained glass. Art glass is 1/8" thick; a stained glass pieces consists of a lot of 1/8" pieces of glass soldered togetherā€¦ which means that it is thin and with all of those joints, it has the potential to come apart.

Fused glass, on the other hand, is a SINGLE piece of glass; while an individual composition is comprised of as many (or more) pieces than a stained glass piece, everything is assembled in the kiln and fired into a single, final piece. Additionally, fused glass can be made as thick as you wantā€¦so, depending on the application, multiple layers of glass can be fused together (think "glass sink"). Really thick pieces are more expensive to produce because the firing process (bringing the heat up, ramping it down, and annealing) takes far longer - it is not uncommon for a firing process to take 20+ hours with a thick/large piece of glass.

  • Stained glass pieces have distracting solder lines which can detract from the overall design composition - fused glass has none of these distractions!

  • With fused glass, you have a larger "palette" to work from. You can "make your own glass" by pre-firing different glass together (to make polka dot glass, for example) and then cut it up for your design.. glass can be fired over and over in most instances.

All of my designs are from my own original drawings; if you have something specific in mind, I would be happy to work with you to create a working drawing for a project.

Technical excellence is evident throughout my pieces; I am a perfectionist when it comes to my work, and am willing to do "whatever it takes" to have a design materialize into the physical.

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