SENI
KECANTIKAN & KESEHATAN
KERAJINAN
BUDAYA & SEJARAH
HIBURAN
LINGKUNGAN
MAKANAN & MINUMAN
MASA DEPAN HIJAU
REKAYASA BALIK
ILMU PENGETAHUAN
OLAHRAGA
TEKNOLOGI
PERANGKAT PAKAI
Core-Formed Glass Vessel — Ancient Glass Technique (Indonesian)
Diterjemahkan
Charlie

Dibuat oleh

Charlie

31. Mei 2026DE
26
0
0
2
0

Core-Formed Glass Vessel — Ancient Glass Technique (Indonesian)

Core-forming is the oldest method of making hollow glass vessels, predating glass blowing by over 1,500 years. This ancient technique was developed in Mesopotamia and Egypt around 1500 BCE. The craftsperson trails molten glass threads around a removable clay-and-dung core attached to a metal rod. Then the surface is smoothed to create elegant perfume bottles, kohl containers, and ceremonial vessels prized across the ancient Mediterranean world. The technique requires no blowing — the craftsperson works entirely with molten glass trails wound around the shaped core.

Decorative patterns are created by trailing threads of contrasting colored glass onto the still-hot surface and dragging them with a pointed tool to create feathered, zigzag, or wave patterns. The colors came from metallic oxides: cobalt for deep blue, copper for turquoise, manganese for purple, and antimony for opaque yellow. Core-formed vessels were luxury goods — the labor-intensive process meant each piece took hours to complete.

When the Romans invented glass blowing around 50 BCE, production costs dropped dramatically and core-forming gradually fell out of use. But the technique's 1,500-year run makes it one of the most enduring craft technologies in human history, and the surviving vessels in museums worldwide demonstrate a level of decorative sophistication that glass blowing took centuries to match.

Lanjutan
6-8 hours (plus cooling)

Instruksi

1

Shape the removable core

The core is a temporary form around which the glass vessel is built — it must be removed after the glass cools, so it is made from a mixture that crumbles easily. Mix clay with animal dung and chopped straw or grass in approximately equal parts by volume. The dung provides organic matter that burns out during heating, making the core porous and easy to scrape out later. The straw adds structural strength during shaping. Mold the mixture around a metal rod (iron or bronze, 6-8 mm diameter) into the shape of the desired vessel interior — typically an elongated flask or bottle form, 8-15 cm long and 3-5 cm at the widest point.

Material untuk langkah ini:

ClayClay500 g

Tools needed:

Sharp KnifeSharp Knife
2

Prepare the glass batch

Ancient Egyptian and Mesopotamian glass used the soda-lime formula: approximately 70% silica sand (crushed quartz), 15% soda (natron from dry lake beds, or plant ash), and 15% lime (ground limestone or crushed seashells). Soda lowers the melting point of silica from over 1700°C to approximately 1050-1100°C — achievable in a charcoal-fired clay crucible. For colored glass, add metallic oxide colorants: cobalt oxide (0.1-0.5% by weight) for deep blue, copper oxide (2-3%) for turquoise, manganese dioxide (1-2%) for purple, or antimony trioxide (3-5%) for opaque yellow-white.

Material untuk langkah ini:

Fine SandFine Sand500 g
NatronNatron100 g
Cobalt OxideCobalt Oxide5 g

Tools needed:

Stone Mortar and Pestle (large)Stone Mortar and Pestle (large)
3

Melt the glass in crucibles

Place the filled crucibles into a charcoal-fired furnace and raise the temperature to approximately 1050-1100°C. This requires sustained bellows operation for 4-6 hours as the raw batch slowly fuses into molten glass. The melt passes through several stages: first the soda fluxes and froths, then the mixture clarifies as trapped gas bubbles rise to the surface, and finally it becomes a smooth, viscous liquid. The glass is ready when a metal rod dipped into the crucible draws out a smooth, continuous thread without lumps or bubbles.

Material untuk langkah ini:

CharcoalCharcoal10 kg

Tools needed:

BellowsBellows
Chemical Splash GogglesChemical Splash Goggles
4

Trail glass threads around the core

Heat the clay core in the furnace opening until it glows red-hot — cold cores cause the glass to crack on contact. Dip a metal rod into the crucible of body-color glass and gather a small amount of molten glass. Holding the core rod horizontally, trail the gathered glass in a tight spiral around the core, starting from the base and working upward. Each trail of glass must fuse to the previous one while both are still hot.

Tools needed:

Crucible Tongs (long-handled)Crucible Tongs (long-handled)
5

Marvel the surface smooth

While the trailed glass is still hot and pliable, roll the vessel on a flat stone slab (a 'marver') to smooth the ridged surface into a uniform wall. The term 'marvering' comes from this ancient technique and is still used by glass blowers today. Press gently and roll evenly — too much pressure will deform the shape; too little will leave the trailing ridges visible. Reheat the vessel in the furnace opening between marvering passes.

Tools needed:

Grinding StoneGrinding Stone
6

Apply decorative glass trails

The hallmark of core-formed vessels is their striking decorative patterns. While the body glass is still hot, gather a contrasting color of molten glass on a thin metal rod and trail it in thin lines around the vessel — horizontal bands, zigzags, or spirals. The classic Egyptian pattern uses opaque yellow and white trails on a dark blue body. For the characteristic 'feather drag' pattern: trail horizontal lines of contrasting glass around the vessel, then immediately drag a pointed metal tool vertically through the trails while they are still soft.

Tools needed:

AwlAwl
7

Form the rim and handles

Shape the vessel rim by gathering additional glass and trailing it around the top opening, building up a flared lip. While the rim glass is still hot, use a flat metal tool to press and shape it into an even, slightly outward-flaring edge. The rim must be smooth — ancient perfume vessels needed a clean lip for controlled pouring. For handles (common on larger vessels), gather a small amount of glass on a metal rod and draw it into a thin trail.

8

Anneal and remove the core

Place the completed vessel (still on its metal rod) into the furnace and reduce the temperature slowly over 4-6 hours. This annealing process relieves internal stresses in the glass that would otherwise cause it to crack as it cools. Ancient workers simply moved the vessel progressively further from the furnace opening over several hours, then left it to cool overnight in the warm ash. Once completely cool, extract the metal rod by twisting and pulling gently.

Bahan

5

Alat yang Diperlukan

7

Connected Blueprint Materials

CC0 Domain Publik

Cetak biru ini dirilis di bawah CC0. Anda bebas untuk menyalin, memodifikasi, mendistribusikan, dan menggunakan karya ini untuk tujuan apa pun, termasuk komersial, tanpa meminta izin.

Dukung Maker dengan membeli produk melalui Cetak Biru mereka di mana mereka mendapatkan Komisi Pembuat yang ditetapkan oleh Penjual, atau buat iterasi baru dari Cetak Biru ini dan masukkan sebagai koneksi di milik Anda sendiri.

Diskusi

(0)

Masuk untuk bergabung dengan diskusi

Loading comments...