#millefiori

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 Rare millefiori Bracelet, Circa 1st century AD, In the 1st century AD, when glass production and tr

Rare millefiori Bracelet, Circa 1st century AD, 

In the 1st century AD, when glass production and trade had spread around the Mediterranean, Augustus, the first Roman Emperor, brought skilled glassworker slaves from Judaea, Syria, and Egypt to the Empire.

These master craftsmen not only carved gem-like glass cameos and created Hellenistic-style pieces through traditional techniques like core-and-rod, slumping, and casting. 

They also introduced the revolutionary art of free-blowing glass. Inflating gobs of molten glass with blowpipes, then working them while controlling their temperatures, produced smooth, thin-walled, bubble-like creations. This dynamic, minute-to-minute method inspired a variety of innovative shapes and styles.

Romans appreciated glass not only for its practicality, but also for its beauty. Vases, for instance, might be marbled, swirled or, through the addition of mineral additives, replicate semi-precious stones. 

Bottles and pitchers might be smooth, textured, lathe-cut, or ornamented with delicate frilled glass trailings. Bowls might be ribbed, rimmed, molded, or fashioned from “millefiori” (thousand flowers) discs.

These mosaic-like pieces, created by patterning glass threads in hollow glass rods, then stretching, slicing, and fusing them together, also enhance plaques, rings, beads, bracelets, and brooches. These ancient pieces were so attractive, in fact, that master glassmakers in Murano, Italy, have recently revived the complex technique.

Mainly cerulean blue, with red, navy blue, and yellow inclusions, 

3″ W x ¾” H,

Image courtesy Artemis Gallery and LiveAuctioneers


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It’s true when they say “inspiration finds us when we are working”, it sure does!  Jotting down idea

It’s true when they say “inspiration finds us when we are working”, it sure does!  Jotting down ideas & doodles in my sketchbook so I can keep track of them all.  I love to create bold stylised botanical drawings in my sketchbooks.  Do any of you keep Sketchbooks? What are your go to things to keep you inspired whilst working on an art project? xx

Find me on Instagram @colleensamanthaparker


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Roman Egyptian millefiori glass beads, c. 1st century BCE to 1st century CE. From Christie’s Auction

Roman Egyptian millefiori glass beads, c. 1st century BCE to 1st century CE. From Christie’s Auctions


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does anyone know if charon has any problems with people making edits with cgs or character sprites from their games-?

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