One Day Zircar Casting with Brooke Hamling

One Day Zircar Casting with Brooke Hamling

In this one day workshop students will get an introduction to hot casting glass using Zircar Mold Mix molds.

By UrbanGlass

Date and time

Saturday, November 22 · 11am - 5pm EST

Location

UrbanGlass

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

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 14 days before event

About this event

  • Event lasts 6 hours

In this one day workshop students will get an introduction to hot casting glass using Zircar Mold Mix molds.  Pouring hot glass into molds in the hot shop allows artists to create unique solid glass objects.  Zircar Mold Mix 6 is a high temperature ceramic mold material used to make light-weight, strong, reusable mold for glass casting and blowing.  During this workshop students will make several reusable molds using Zircar Mold Mix 6.  These molds will be made over pre-made floral and botanical wax positives. After the molds have dried the students will learn to cast glass into the molds in the hot shop.

 

What to Expect: During this workshop students will make several palm sized floral and botanical molds using Zircar Mold Mix 6. These molds will be built up around pre-made wax positives. After these molds are allowed to dry during a brief lunch break, the class will move to the hot shop and begin casting hot glass into the molds.  These molds will be open-faced and are generally reusable. The students can expect to leave the session with the skills to make a Zircar mold,  their reusable molds, and eventually the glass objects they cast during the session. The class will include demonstrations but students will make their own molds and participate in casting the glass.


This is going to be a low stress - high instructor input introduction to the hot glass studio. Everyone will hopefully get to walk away with multiple pieces that they will feel they had a hand in creating AND be inspired to come back and learn more about glass. Glass in its molten state is 2000 degrees. The hot shop is a loud studio, and can get quite warm. Read more about how to prepare for class on our Registration Info page. 


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


Pick-up: The glass needs to cool down over several nights, so the students will have to return to UrbanGlass once notified to pick up their work. 


This is an in-person class taking place on-site at UrbanGlass. Health and safety guidelines will be emailed to you upon registration. 


We recommend registering for classes early to reserve your spot! We base materials, and teacher needs off of student enrollment. Early registration not only guarantees your spot in class, but also helps to ensure the class will run. Classes with low enrollment may be cancelled within two weeks of the start date of class. Contact our Registrar of Education, Ari Eshoo, at arianna@urbanglass.org if you have questions about the class or would like to arrange a payment plan.



1 Session, Saturday, November 22, 11am-5pm

Instructor: Brooke Hamling

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.

$425