Old Glass Repair - What is Possible?

Welcome to our Antique Bottle community

Be a part of something great, join today!

DeepSeaDan

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2013
Messages
467
Reaction score
933
Points
93
I was told by the owner of a glass-blowing / molding company that one would have to know the exact formula for the old glass that one wanted repaired, otherwise any attempt at repair would be futile.

Is that correct?

I have heard of individuals who apparently can & do repair old glass - to what extent, I do not know.

DSD
 

slugplate

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 7, 2016
Messages
438
Reaction score
367
Points
63
I've always wondered about that myself. If I really wanted it for my private collection I'd fix it as best I can... if I have most of the pieces.
 

embe

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 14, 2019
Messages
746
Reaction score
544
Points
93
I was told by the owner of a glass-blowing / molding company that one would have to know the exact formula for the old glass that one wanted repaired, otherwise any attempt at repair would be futile.

Is that correct?

I have heard of individuals who apparently can & do repair old glass - to what extent, I do not know.

DSD

I'm no expert, but if the repair involves melting the glass and adding new glass, the glass COE (coefficient of expansion) would probably need to be close in value so it doesn't crack and fracture while it cools.
 

ROBBYBOBBY64

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2020
Messages
4,946
Reaction score
5,402
Points
113
Location
New Jersey
Maybe a bottle can be repaired or fused together if the parts used are from two of the same bottle? I would love to make a mold and blow my own bottle. Probably need to go to a glass studio. Take classes etc. Lot of time and money but still it does not deter my dream.
 

DeepSeaDan

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2013
Messages
467
Reaction score
933
Points
93
My initial inquiry involved asking the glass-maker if he could fabricate & attach handles to old bottles I'd re-fashioned into wanna-be beer mugs. He said that without the original glass formula, he could not adhere a different formula glass to it. He also cautioned me about cutting the old glass; his concern was violent fracturing of the glass when subjected to heat. I'm happy to say that I've gotten pretty good at cutting old glass, with nary a violent incident!

So, my old beer mugs are still beer glasses.

I can live with that.

DSD
 

ROBBYBOBBY64

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2020
Messages
4,946
Reaction score
5,402
Points
113
Location
New Jersey
I dont understand that. I could see how bottle glass and laboratory glass or crystal would not work. Probably like soldering stainless steel...just doesnt work right. My question is how does murano glass make such beautiful glass with loads of colored glass even metal like gold in the glass. Two bottles of the same era should i think be worth trying. Just a thought. Maybe they don't want to get involved with the job.
 

hemihampton

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 6, 2006
Messages
9,140
Reaction score
6,159
Points
113
I'm no expert but I think glass can be repaired using clear epoxy resin & you can add color to it to match your bottle. LEON.
 

ROBBYBOBBY64

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2020
Messages
4,946
Reaction score
5,402
Points
113
Location
New Jersey
Colorant that does not get bleached out by the sun is next to impossible. Even the expensive stuff. I have fixed bottles with epoxy. If the crack is clean and all the pieces are there, no need for color being the repair is so tight. It is hard to see what color the repair is.
 

hemihampton

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 6, 2006
Messages
9,140
Reaction score
6,159
Points
113
I'm talking about making missing pieces. not glueing existing pieces together.
 

Members online

Latest threads

Forum statistics

Threads
83,321
Messages
743,586
Members
24,348
Latest member
Coronado
Top