Interior Design Glass

Are you redesigning a kitchen, bathroom, or patio in your home. Soda glass is a material you can use to add color and style to the room. Soda glass which is architectural glass is excellent quality and very durable. This glass is easy to install and is used for a variety of applications. This glass is used for kitchen back splashes, vanity tops in the bathroom, shower walls, fireplaces, kitchen tables, and cabinet door panels. Painted glass or glass tile is often used around a fireplace.

Back painted glass can be cut into different shapes for almost any design. It can be drilled, and bent to make it fit anywhere. It can be polished by a number of different methods. This glass can be beveled, pencil polished, or flat polished. It is sometimes called Soda Glass. Coated glass look striking as a back splash in a large or small kitchen. The colored glass breaks up the design of the room. This type of glass is easy to clean because it is like glass tile. It makes a great kitchen table top for old tables that need a new design and look. The material is easy to eat on and clean up quickly. Coated glass come in variety of colors so you can find the right one to match your table top.

Using Glass walls in the bathroom shower makes good design sense. This is because you can choose a color to match your color theme. Not only that soda glass is easy to clean and looks great in the bathroom shower. Glass walls are great in small bathroom or very large ones where you want cleaning to be as easy as possible. It is durable so the shower walls will wear a long time. Back painted glass is recyclable so it is good for the enviroment. It can be used again for another project.

Painted glass add class to office and lobby designs. Even a small section of a window or elevator with painted glass can impress clients. Soda Glass is a popular material with designers because it is so versatile. The colored glass can be painted many different colors and the paint bonds with the glass so it is good choice for design. Think about using back painted glass when you design your next room.

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Interior Design Glass

People often love to decorate their homes as a way of creating an atmosphere that both looks good and as welcoming to other people. Many spend great amounts of money on trying to reach a certain level of perfection or trying to recreate an image that they have in their head of the perfect home. However, one type of item that is often overlooked when it comes to interior decorating is interior design glass. This is glass that is colored and used to create atmosphere in conjunction with light coming from outside or created by lamps.

There are many companies that create products which people turn to and use to decorate their homes. Mainly, the products that deal in interior design glass consist of glass items such as back painted glass, painted glass, glass tile, glass walls, colored glass, coated glass, Soda Glass and soda glass. These types of glass which are various in nature, all help to create a different look and create items which are perfect for accenting a home or living space. When looking for these products, many homeowners find that they can sometimes be difficult and when found can often be of low quality and can end up disappointing.

The Internet is a fantastic resource when it comes to looking for items to decorate a home. Many websites feature discounts or sales for items featuring interior design glass. Other websites such as Ebay and Craigslist are also great resources for trying to find the perfect piece to compliment a living space. People often love to decorate their homes. However, this can often come at a very large price because people have a certain image in their head of the way that they want their house to look. But, there is a way to decorate a home yet still save a great deal of money in the process. Interior design glass is a cheap and efficient way to bring ambience to any room. Often these items are made with many materials including back painted glass, painted glass, glass tile, glass walls, colored glass, coated glass, Soda Glass and soda glass. When looking to bring life to a home by decoration, interior design glass may just be what is needed.

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Interior Design Glass

New design concepts are being created everyday and recently glass has appeared on the design scene as a contender for backsplashes, countertops, stair railing, fireplace surrounds and for countless other uses. It can be used in 1/8 inch thickness all the way up to 1 inch. If it used as clear glass it creates a subtle effect and as back painted glass it can be really breathtaking especially textured back painted glass.

Interior design glass has a remarkable number uses. Soda glass is very popular and has many interior applications. Soda glass is used to make shower surrounds, countertops for kitchen and bath, back splashes, office and lobby décor, Fireplaces, cabinet door panels, appliance cover panels and to build elevators and line their interiors. It can be used as countertops with bull-nosed or ogee edges or cut into switch plate covers with beveled edges. It has the capacity to be cut into glass tile or used as slabs of up to 84 inches by 130 inches. Soda glass can be colored coded on the textured or smooth side. The colors can also be customized to match the color wanted.

Soda Glass is a finishing process which makes any glass a coated glass, including safety glass, heat resistant glass or laminated glass. The color coating is applied permanently. An image can also be printed on the glass with the Soda Glass process. The color melds to the glass surface and is durable. The glass can be installed with the same benefits of untreated glass. Coated glass that receives a Soda Glass application will require little maintenance, it’s also durable, waterproof and easy to clean. Because glass is non-porous, it doesn’t harbor germs or bacteria.

Interior decorators can apply colored glass to create glass walls or use glass tile to decorate the walls. Painted glass is used extensively throughout commercial and residential buildings. The painted glass of glass walls can be textured or smooth, creating different visual effects. The beauty of colored glass is subtle but noticeable. Its clean glossy surface always has a positive effect on those surrounded by its beauty.

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Interior Design Glass

Dazzle with interior design glass
It is your first home of your own or you are starting a new life in a marriage and want to decorate the nest. Maybe you have been in the same space for a lifetime and want to make a splash. Interior design glass can do the trick. Try back painted glass or painted glass to dress up almost any surface or room in the house. Glass tile and glass walls can really make the kitchen or bathroom shine. Add colored glass to any table, counter surface, or cabinet to complement the paint scheme in your home and really make the place pop. Coated glass, Soda Glass, and soda glass are all wonderful options. You can add glass tile or glass walls to your bathroom, create accent walls of soda glass or Soda Glass, put coated glass on your shower doors–the options are endless. Add to that any color you can imagine matched with the color codes of major paint manufacturers and painted glass will really make your home shine. Try colored glass and back painted glass in any room. Add it to dressers, shelves, walls, refrigerator doors, or backsplashes in the kitchen. Interior design glass is nonporous, comes in large sheets, and is easy to work with. It can be cut, bent, drilled, or notched to fit any purpose you have in mind. It also comes in a variety of thicknesses and can be ordered in a variety of edges such as flat-polished, pencil-polished, bull-nosed, mitered, ogee, or chipped. Colored glass is a wonderful option, easily cleaned with a simple damp cloth and a good glass cleaner. It will enhance any room, be a conversation piece, and be the next trend setter in your neighborhood. Friends and family won’t be able to stop talking about the beauty of interior design glass.

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Interior Design Glass

Are you looking for something to liven up your home, give it some pizazz, really make it pop? Interior design glass may be the answer for you! Back painted glass or painted glass is a wonderful option that can give a make over to any room in your house. Think of any place in your house where glass, stone, or tile can be used, then think about replacing it with back painted glass. Painted glass gives surfaces shine, catches the eye, makes people talk as they are dazzled by glass tile, glass walls, choices of colored glass or coated glass, Soda Glass and soda glass. No more same old, same old as a rainbow of colored glass options light up the room.

You might be wondering what can be transformed in your home through the use of such products as coated glass, Soda Glass or soda glass. Stretch your imagination and picture a new vanity top and shower walls in your bathroom. Why not spruce up the kitchen with kitchen backsplashes along with your refrigerator and cabinet doors? Fireplaces can get a face lift and accent walls throughout your home can be brightened with interior design glass. Glass walls and glass tile are also wonderful for making your business or office space more unique and inviting.

Soda glass and a variety of colored glass is available in just about any color imaginable, matched with paint codes of leading paint manufacturers. It comes in several thicknesses, large sheets, and can be modified for any surface by cutting, bending, drilling, tempering, and notching it. When used for countertops, it can be tailored to preference with options such as flat-polished, pencil polished, beveled, bull-nosed, mitered, ogee, or chipped. Glass walls and glass tile, or any surface covered in glass, are non porous and make cleaning a dream with a simple wipe down and a glass cleaner. Now is your chance to get that new look at your home that will have everyone talking. Try something new with interior design glass and you might be the envy of all others, starting a trend that won’t stop.

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Interior Design Glass

In this instance the term soda glass refers not to a container in which to pour a bubbly beverage, but to back painted glass, the latest thing in design material. The sleek architectual beauty of this material is stunning and adds a unique custom look to bathrooms, kitchens, and anywhere else. It is a wonderful recycled material that is easy to install, can be customized in endless ways, and is the cutting edge of new design materials. It can also be cut to almost any design.

Imagine glass walls, or countertops with painted glass matched to to any desired color. Imagine colored glass in an amazing array of textures. The glass can be customized to blend or match the best paint manufacturer’s color codes. Painted glass can be used everywhere one might use glass, stone or tile. This coated glass material is perfect fo kitchen backplashes, bathroom vanity tops, or fireplace surrounds, and gives a sleek, contemporary look to any environment. Add a colored glass wall as an accent in a home or office for a touch of luxury. Painted glass can be cut into almost any shape as well, which limits the use of glass tile only to the limits of the imagination.

Businesses can define themselves by using the contemporary design element of soda glass, or Soda Glass, for retail displays, office and lobby decor, or even elevators. Glass walls make a statement through their contemporay design look that is forward-thinking. In today’s world, forward thinking is a very good thing.

Glass tile is available in all standard glass thickness. Coated glass, or Soda Glass, is durable and easy to clean. Soda glass can be back painted, or painted on the front surface for a different affect. Surface edges can be customized in different ways. Back painted glass comes in many attractive textures as well.

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Recycling Glass | Facts & Tips

Glass. It’s something we really couldn’t live without, from the bottles & jars in a grocery store, to the windshield in your car or even the back painted glass in your home. We’ve all been taught to recycle it but you probably don’t know much about it or some of the benefits from it.

Glass Cullet

Let’s start off with a Useful Glass Recycling Term:
Cullet – Glass that’s been crushed & is ready to be remelted & recycled.

Using cullet is extremely environmentally friendly in creating new glass. It requires less energy, is less damaging to blasting furnaces, creates no by-products & saves raw materials. In fact the Glass Packaging Institute estimates that for every ton of cullet used to create new glass, “ 1,300 pounds of sand, 410lbs of soda ash, 380lbs of limestone, and 160lbs of feldspar” are saved.  Since glass products can be made of up to 70% cullet it can have quite the positive impact on a manufacturing plant.

Here’s a round up of some interesting & useful facts about that you might not have known about glass recycling .

  • Glass is 100% recyclable and can be recycled indefinitely without sacrificing any quality.
  • 90% of recycled glass is used to create new bottles & jars. Which can then find themselves back on store shelves within a month.
  • The remaining 10% of glass recycled finds itself in a host of consumer materials including housing materials, furniture, & consumer electronics.
  • California has the highest % of recycled bottles in the US at 80%

How the glass is collected plays a large role in the quality & type of recycling the glass must go through. To find some of the best practices for glass collection head on over to the Glass Packaging Institute which has thoroughly explains how to help ensure glass recycling efficiency.

Sources: Glass Packaging Institute, US EPA

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Sodaglass will be at The Kitchen and Bath Industry Show

We’ll be at he Kitchen and Bath Industry Show in Las Vegas from April 26th – 28th 2011.

The Kitchen & Bath Industry Show (KBIS) is the world’s largest international trade event focused exclusively on all aspects of kitchens and baths specifically serving kitchen and bath dealers, designers, architects, remodelers, wholesalers and custom builders. It is the ultimate destination to discover the latest products, designs, trends and education that the industry has to offer. Owned by the National Kitchen and Bath Association (NKBA), KBIS is sponsored by Kitchen and Bath Business (K+BB) and produced by Nielsen Expositions.

Year after year KBIS continues to showcase more products than ever, bring you star-studded celebrity guests, provide the most informative educational sessions and deliver the best networking opportunities. Be a part of the industry, be there!

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Glass Making Techniques Part 3 | Modern Manufacturing

While back painted glass is definitely one of the most modern uses & incarnations of glass, the creation & manipulation of glass has been around for thousands of years. Over then next few weeks we’ll be going over some of the techniques used by through out history to create this beautiful material we know as glass.

Welcome to the third & final part of our series on glass making techniques. In our previous posts we covered the gradual evolution of creating glass objects from the simple coating of clay molds, to glass blown by artists whose skills are gained throughout their life time, to the unskilled labors using mechanical presses. All these process have lead up to what we consider to be the modern manufacturing of glass and many are still used but in a much larger & faster way.

To start things off a near continuous stream of molten glass is feed into the forming machines from the aptly named melting tank. Now how each particular forming machine then creates the glass object is where all the former glass making techniques come back into play. As you’d expect there are methods best suited for particular objects. For example, the technique of blowing glass when combined with the molds perfected by casting, allow for the mass production of bottles, beakers, etc.

The introduction of mechanical aid & machines first seen with the mechanical press in the mid 1800s have since been fully automated. Continuously feed with molten glass computerized hydraulics presses have allowed for the creation of cups, bowls, and plates at a rate and level of quality completely unobtainable in years past.

While rolling presses have allowed for high quality sheets, panes, & windows to be mass produced. Windows in particular saw great leaps in quality & uniformity from these modernization techniques, as glass blown windows had some obvious draw backs.

Glass making has, still is a fascinating process, the refinement & automation of these processes have allowed the wide spread use of glass in our every day lives. From iPhones & TVs to cars & homes it’d be quite hard to imagine a world without glass.

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Glass Making Techniques Part 2 | Engraving & The Mechanical Press

While back painted glass is definitely one of the most modern uses & incarnations of glass, the creation & manipulation of glass has been around for thousands of years. Over then next few weeks we’ll be going over some of the techniques used by through out history to create this beautiful material we know as glass.
Welcome to the second part of our glass making technique series. In our last part we covered the main methods used to create glass for thousands of years. During these years engraving techniques were developed that allowed for the elaborate decoration of artisan made glass. Through the use of hand held metal or stone wheel tools often tipped with diamond or copper textures & designs would be made by grinding & cutting into the glass. An artistic technique called stippling, which through the use of dots could add shading & patterns was also used.  In order to create the patterns a diamond tipped tool would need to be tapped on the glass hundreds if not thousands of times, making it quite a labor intensive process.

As glass making made it’s way into the 1800s an era known for the revolution of industry, a new technique & tool came about that require very little skill from those making glass object. This tool was the mechanical press & it improved upon the idea set forth by casting. By creating a template pattern made out of iron or bronze hot or molten glass could simply be placed in this mold the press would be closed & as the glass cooled it would take the form of the template pattern. This technique made it possible for unskilled laborers to create beautiful glass items. Unfortunately this method wasn’t perfect as deformates could often be seen in the finished product. To combat this, initial mechanical presses required very intricate patterns which hid this imperfections in the glass. Fortunately by the mid 1800s this became less of a problem & simpler patterns could be used. The mechanical press helped pave the way for modern manufacturing glass techniques.

Be sure to check back next week for more information & if you’d like to learn more about glass be sure to check out the resources available at the Corning Musem of Glass & The British Museum.

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