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| Bead
History - Ancient Artform |
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Beads
have been made of glass for over 5,000 years. The discovery of fire was
the essential step in glass bead making. There is evidence as early as
2340-2180 BC in Mesopotamia of a method known as "core-forming"
where they used a metal mandrel with pieces of glass held over a flame.
Gradually as the glass soften, they would wrap it around the mandrel forming
intricate ornaments.
These early beads,
or vessels were considered valuable and were preserved as they were placed
in burial tombs. In Nuzi (130 miles north of Baghdad) beads were discovered
that date to around 1400 BC. Even today, we make beads by holding glass
rods over a flame then gently winding the molten glass over the mandrels.
The invention of the blow pipe in gave way to the creation of the Rosetta
bead and the seed beads which sustained the bead making industry in Venice
for centuries. Beadmaking is truly an ancient artform.
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Beadmaking
in Venice
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The
history of beadmaking in Venice goes back to the days of Marco Polo when
he returned from his travels with the beads of Asia. Local artisians took
to their glass making skills to reproduce in glass the precious stones of
Marco Polo.
In Venice and Murano, the beading industry has historically been a woman's
work. In the picture above you see the women working while caring for their
children. During the 1920s - 1930s, the conterie (seed bead) industry sustained
Venice's glass industry. The wars took the men from the furnaces and between
World War I and World War II there was little time to build up the industry.
During the 1930s there were as many as 30 companies making the tiny beads,
employing hundreds of women.
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| Types
of Beads Produced in Venice |
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Seedbead - Conterie
Hollow tubes produced then chopped and refired for smoothness and
color. Sold in shanks prestrung or by the kilo. Used in decorative
jewelry and clothing. The peak of this production was in the early
1900s and today the industry is virtually non-existent in Murano.
Rosetta or Chevron
Produced from the canes known as Rosetta which had a center hole.
First produced in Murano at the end of the 14th Century. It was
made of a hollow cane and six layers of glass (white, blue, white,
brick red, white then finally blue). It was ground to produce patterns
of 5 concentric stars with twelve points. The canes were chopped
and this production method increased greatly the quantities of beads
which could be sold.
Later as this
cane was produced without the hole and the Millefiori canes were
born which today create the famous Murano Millefiori beads or sometimes
known as lace beads.
Blown Beads (Venetian Blown)
With the introduction of the lampwork flame, beadmakers discovered
they could melt the canes and then blow the glass. Today our spiral
blown beads and beads with stripes of color are produced using the
Filigrana Method where canes of glass are laid down and picked up
with a blow pipe.
Lampwork or Wound Beads or Perle a Lume Venetian Beads
Often called wound beads because the melting glass is wound over
a mandrel. Originally the Venetian beads were wound over a ferrous
mandrel which had been covered with a mixture of silica and clay
which gave the bead some room for contraction when it cooled and
helped remove the bead from the mandrel. This material was originally
known as "fango" meaning mud and legend is that it was,
indeed, the mud from the lagoon.
In the 1920s
copper mandrels were introduced into Murano by the Moretti firm
and soon became the standard for making beads. It was considered
an economical as the mandrels did not need to be coated and minimized
breakage in removing from the mandrel because mandrel was cut off
just below the bead and the entire bead was placed in Nitric Acid
which etched the copper from inside the bead. However, environmental
standards are adding to the cost of this process and many small
beadmakers do not have the equipment, rather they take bags of beads
to one or two shops who specialize in this etching process. Today's
beadmakers in Venice and Murano use both methods, using stainless
steel with a bead release material for more delicate beads or beads
with silver which tends to burn (turn dark) if it touches the acid.
Murano beads are made much in the same was as thousands of years
ago.
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Filigrana Method Blown Beads
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Rosetta Canes
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Seed Bead
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| Timeline
of Venetian Beads and Important Discoveries |
1292 Glass Furnaces
Moved to Murano
1308 Bead-makers Guild Formed
1470 Canna developed in Murano around this time
1511 Murano prohibited from exporting to Bavaria (Germany)
1797 Fall of the Venetian Republic
1935 Copper Mandrels introduced
1993 Venetian Bead Shop
begins importing Venetian Beads
1993 USA Society of Bead Makers begins Precott, Arizona
1998 VenetianBeadShop.com
Online Shopping dedicated to Venetian Beads opens
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References
on Beadmaking History
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The History of Beads
by Lois Sherr Dubin
Perle e Impiraperle (un lavora di donne a Venezia tra 800-900) Arsenale
Editrice ISBN 88 7743 077 X
Collective Beads by
Robert K. Liu ISBN 0-9641023-0-7
Perle Veneziane by
Consorzio Venezia Perle (1989)
The Book of Beads
by Janet Coles, Robert Budwig(Contributor)
The Complete Bead
Resource Book by Patricia Abahusay
The History of Lampworking
by Robert A. Mickelsen
Coles, J. and R. Budwig.
1990. The Book of Beads. New York: Simon and Schuster
History of the Glass
Bead (compiled by Lady Sveva Lucciola)
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Note:
All beads are enlarged to show details. See Bead Sizes for accurate
sizing. Price is per bead unless otherwise stated. Prices are in
US dollars.
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Your source for: Venetian Beads
- Murano Beads - Swarovski Crystals - Austrial Crystals - Venetian
Jewelry - Jewellery Venetian - Lampwork Beads - Venetian Glass Beads
- Murano Glass Beads - Murano Glass - Venetian Dichroic Beads and
Murano Cane Glass. Venetian Bead Shop is a direct importer - Retail
and Wholesale
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Direct to you from
the Furnaces of Murano
www.venetianglassart.com
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Venetian Glass is a direct importer
of Murano Glass, Venetian Glass featuring Murano Chandeliers, Venetian
Jewelry, Murano glass paperweights, Murano figurines, Venetian vases,
Venetian Wine Glasses, Murano Glass Clowns, Venetian Glass Drawer
Pulls, Wine Stoppers, Handmade Venetian Jewelry, Corporate Gifts
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Visit our Yahoo!
Store Since 1998 GlobalGiftMall.com
GlobalGiftmall is a direct importer of Venetian Glass
and Murano Glass
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©1998-2007 The Unlimited US
- VenetianBeadShop.com| All Rights Reserved©
Tel: 1 800 439 3551 - Fax: 1 408 245 5904- Int'l Tel: 001 408 245
5900
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| Venetian
Bead Shop is a direct importer of Venetian Beads and Murano Beads. Your
source of wholesale Venetian Beads and wholesale Murano Glass beads. Working
directly with the beadmakers of Venice and the island of Murano, often designing
our own beads, we feature over 8000 different colors and styles of traditional
and modern Venetian glass beads. The beads begin with Effetre Moretti
glass canes which are produced on the island of Murano. Each bead is handmade
one by one by beadmakers sitting behind a torches with a mandrel in one
hand and a cane of glass in the other, known as lampwork. We introduced
Venetian Dichroic Beads to the US through our efforts with our beadmakers
in Murano and revived an ancient technique of furnace glass with our partner
in Murano. We continue to bring new and innovative ideas to this age old
Murano industry. We have been importing Venetian Beads continuously since
1993, shipping worldwide. We also offer Swarovski Crystals, Gold Findings,
Sterling Silver Findings, Softflex Wire, Beadalon Wire and a variety
of Beading Tools and Supplies. We offer wholesale beads and the largest
Venetian Bead Shop Wholesale showroom in the US with over 3000 sq ft of
beads! |
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