-40%
Peace Sign Rasta colors 10 gm pyrex boro mille millifiori murrine
$ 17.42
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
This listing is for a 10 gm rod.Increasing the quantity increases the amount you are buying by 10 gm.
Michael's Millies
I have other millies available on Ebay and I plan on making and listing more so check back.
10 gm. handmade borosilicate
(
COE33
) millefiori/murrini cane. The diameter is 8 - 10 mm. You can request the larger or smaller diameter.
I have been making murrine for many years so you won't find bubbles/cracks running through them. Since these are handmade, there is always the possibility of some flaw slipping by. If you happen to receive a piece with a crack/bubble or other significant flaw, or if it was damaged in transit, return it for a full refund.
All my murrine is made with high quality color (no Chinese import color), I try to pull them as even as possible but there can be some variation.
I use disc nippers to slice millies (they may be called mosaic tile cutters) but they leave dirty edges so I have this other technique that I prefer to use when I work with millies.
Stick and Snap Technique:
Prepare your millie first by attaching a rod or something to it, to use as a handle.
Set your torch to a small sharp flame, and heat the spot where you want the millie. At the same time start passing the very end of the millie through the flame back and forth to heat it up kinda slowly. You want to get the spot on the tube, marble, or whatever nearly white hot, but just in a small spot on the surface so you don't disturb anything around it, or make your tubing wall cave in. And at the same time you want the end (1-2mm) of your millie a nice orange; hot enough to stick, but not hot enough to get smeared at all.
Now you’re going to stick the millie on, but the trick is when you stick it on to move the millie back and forth a little bit so the hot glass on your piece gets pushed up on either side of the millie rod a little (maybe 1-2mm), then you just let it cool a bit, and when it is nearly too cool to move anymore, you snap it off . The little bit of glass that melts to the sides of the millie rod is the key, how far up the millie rod the glass is determines how thick a slice of the millie will snap off. You can get paper thin slices or big thick ones.
After I get a nice image on my piece I usually flame polish it lightly, then put a little dab of clear over. Then it's ready to be melted in. If you put too large of a dab of clear on top, it can spread the image out, or, if too small of a dab, it can shrink the image a little.
Alright, well I hope that’s clear.
If something isn't clear or after you try it you come up with some questions, let me know.
Peace,
Michael
Thanks for looking!