Lost Wax Casting and Mold Making Techniques with Celeste Wilson

Lost Wax Casting and Mold Making Techniques with Celeste Wilson

This weekend class covers basic to advanced mold making techniques.

By UrbanGlass

Date and time

June 14 · 6pm - June 16 · 9pm EDT

Location

UrbanGlass

647 Fulton St Floor 3 (Enter on Rockwell Pl.) Brooklyn, NY 11217

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About this event

  • 2 days 3 hours

This weekend class covers basic to advanced mold making techniques. Whether you’re looking to get into rubber molds for lost wax casting or you’re a total beginner to mold making, this course will help clarify these many-step processes and help you understand the minutiae of the craft of making molds. We’ll cover brush-on rubber molds, poured rubber molds, 2 part mother molds, wax working, and making positives from your rubber molds. Please note: we will not be casting with glass in this class; we will only be generating wax and plaster positives. This course could be considered a prerequisite for any glass casting class. 


What to Expect: Clothing that you don’t mind getting messy and stained should be worn, aprons will also be available for studio use. Bring objects less than 6" in any direction that you would like to make a mold out of.  Read more about how to prepare for class on our Registration Info page. 


Eligibility: No experience required. Open to ages 14 and up.


3 Sessions, Friday, June 14th, 6pm-9pm, Saturday & Sunday June 15th & 16th 10am-6pm both days

instructors Celeste Wilson

Organized by

UrbanGlass fosters experimentation and advances the use and critical understanding of glass as a creative medium. The organization provides access to and an education in glass for professional artists, seniors, students, and members of the public of all backgrounds and familiarity with the material. We offer year-round free and low-cost programming through our 17,000 square foot studios, robust class schedule, fellowship and scholarship opportunities, exhibition center, and in-house printed magazine.

Founded in 1977 by a group of dedicated artists, UrbanGlass sought to confront the many barriers limiting creative access to glass such as the high costs of real estate, equipment, and the scarcity of technical expertise. From the organization’s conception it served as it does today: As a creative hub and unparalleled resource center for artists, enabling this material to become available for experimentation beyond the confines of factories and universities in New York City for the first time. Today, glass is seen as an integral component of contemporary art’s complex landscape.

$1,055