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Bontemps on Glass Making: the Guide du Verrier of Georges Bontemps
The fifth in a series on how the understanding of glassmaking
advanced over the course of three centuries from the early 1600s to
around 1870. Georges Bontemps (1799-1884) was probably the most
skilful and adventurous European glass works manager of his age.
His life began inauspiciously because he was illegitimate and
ignored by his father, a graduate of the cole polytechnique and
army officer. In 1817 Georges was refused entry to the cole
polytechnique, despite having done well in the entry examination.
Bontemp then became assistant to Dartigues, owner of three separate
works making lead crystal, and was soon managing the glass making
at Baccarat. By 1822 he was directing the glass works at
Choisy-le-Roi which was unusual in making several kinds of glass
including window glass, lead crystal, domestic wares such as
drinking glasses, stained glass windows, and optical glass. At
Choisy-le-Roi he was responsible for several major advances. He
remained there until 1848 when he moved to England to work for
Chance Brothers in Smethwick for six years before returning to
France. His Guide du Verrier, published in 1868, is the most
detailed known authoritative description of the glass making
practices of his time. Its seven sections describe the techniques
of glass melting and making window glass, plate glass, bottles,
lead crystal, optical glass, and stained glass windows. Bontemps
had firsthand experience of all of these except making cast plate.
Dozens of batch recipes are given, especially of coloured glasses.
The book is copiously illustrated. One of its unique features is an
analysis of the economics of the process at the end of each
section.
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The Art of Glass (Paperback)
Antonio Neri, Christopher Merrett; Edited by Michael Cable
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R1,035
Discovery Miles 10 350
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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THIS is the first of a series of volumes edited by Professor M.
Cable illustrating progress in understanding glass making from the
17th century to the early part of the 19th. Known as THE WORLD'S
MOST FAMOUS BOOK ON GLASSMAKING, it was first published, in
Italian, in 1612, as L'Arte Vetraria by Antonio Neri who claimed to
have experience of glassmaking in several countries and described
the best practice of that time, particularly in making coloured
glasses. A second edition printed in 1661 made the work more widely
known. An English translation by Christopher Merrett MD, one of the
early Fellows of the Royal Society, was published in 1662. Merrett
added very extensive notes of his own which almost doubled the
length of the book. That text became the master for subsequent
editions. It was eventually translated into Latin, French, German,
and Spanish, and reprinted at least twenty times over the course of
almost two centuries. This edition reproduces Merrett's original
layout, including the printers ornaments, but is set more legibly
and corrects some errors. It is introduced by an essay written in
1962 by Professor W. E. S. Turner FRS which explains the background
and importance of this work.
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