Friday, June 7, 2019

Oh, Lalique! Decorated glass and crystal

Copyright © Françoise Herrmann

Renowned innovator of Art Deco jewelry, René Lalique (1860-1945) also became a master glassmaker. Initially commissioned to create perfume bottles, he went on to create monumental glass structures such as fountains, church alters, and dining room chandeliers, for example, for such luxury liners as The Normandie. René Lalique even became famous for the car radiator caps that he created out of glass.

To obtain the poetically sculpted glass pieces that are so well known, René Lalique invented a way of producing decorated glass as a single piece using a waste-mold casting process.

The French patent FR475348, titled Procédé de fabrication d’objets en verre ou cristal décoré (Process for the fabrication of decorated glass or crystal objects), granted February 16, 1915, to René Lalique, recites the waste-mold casting process used to create the signature Lalique glass or crystal pieces. A process that enables the production of glass or crystal pieces with ornamental designs that appear sculpted on their surface, displaying all the finest details of the mold. 

The patent recites a process that subsumes the application of wax or wax-type decorations on the glass or crystal surface. The glass or crystal, and its wax decorations are then cast in a mold made of a substance capable of resisting high furnace temperatures, such as a clay or clay-type mold. The clay mold, containing the wax decorated glass or crystal object, is then subjected to high furnace temperatures, causing the wax to volatilize, and the glass to soften sufficiently for it to be blown into the recesses left empty by the volatilized wax. Once cooled, the mold is then broken, and the glass or crystal piece appears with its ornamental decoration, as a single sculpted piece, that includes all the finest details of the mold.

A variation of the process is also described for cases where the ornamental design is very large, and the glass object has a large opening such as a wide-rimmed vase or bowl. In this case, the whole object with the ornamental design is made of wax, then cast in a clay-type mold. The mold is then furnace-heated to the point where the whole wax model with decorations volatilizes. The temperature of the mold is then such that molten glass might be introduced directly into the mold, where it is blown into all the recesses left empty by the volatilized wax model. Finally, once cooled, the mold is broken, and the decorated glass piece appears sculpted with all of its detailed ornaments.

The patent figure 2 is included below, depicting a narrow-rimmed glass or crystal object (1) with ornamental decorations on the surface, within a mold (2). The rim of the glass or crystal object is connected to a cane (3), through which the glass blower will blow to push the softened glass into the ornamental recesses left empty by the volatilized wax, after the mold has been heated in a furnace.

The image of one of René Lalique's famous sculpted vases, called Les Bacchantes, is also included.


References
Musée Lalique
https://www.musee-lalique.com/en

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