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Glass Alchemy Code
  1. 100 - Reds (1)
  2. 200 - Oranges (1)
  3. 300 - Yellows (3)
  4. 400 - Greens (1)
  5. 500 - Blues (2)
  6. 700 - Violets (1)
  7. 900 - Neutrals (3)
Color Characteristics
  1. Crayon/Opaque (Colloidal) (9)
  2. Translucent (Ionic) (4)
  3. WYSIWYG (10)
  4. Color Changing (2)
 

12mm Rod

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Red Crayon, 104 Rods
This color was designed to provide the artist with a vivid, highly saturated opaque red.

Working Tip: Pre-heat in outer flame.  Avoid rapid heating.

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Orange Crayon, 204 Rods
This color was designed to provide the artist with a highly saturated vibrant opaque orange.

Working Tip: Pre-heat in outer flame. Avoid rapid heating.

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Rasta Gold Crayon, 302 Rods
This color is a golden yellow designed to match the yellow in the Ethiopian flag.

Working Tip: Pre-heat in outer flame. Avoid rapid heating.

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Yellow Crayon, 304 Rods
Yellow Crayon is a bright organic yellow.  With the introduction of Sunburst Orange, the Yellow Crayon standards are tightening up and staying on the yellow side of the yellow-orange spectrum.

Working Tip:  Pre-heat in outer flame. Avoid rapid heating.

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Silver Strike-5, 385 Rods
Silver Strike-5, 385 gives the artist control over the outcome.  The more you work this color the more intriguing the final result will be; this color is more intense than Silver Strike-3, 383.

Working Tip: Heat to a dull orange and cool multiple times to strike the color.  Use a reducing flame to create the popular bleached tones.

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Agua Azul, 446 Rods

Agua Azul, 446 is hailed by many as the best boro color ever.  It looks great on its own, compliments or contrasts nearly all colors in the Glass Alchemy palette, and works great in encasement applications.  These features and many more have allowed Agua Azul, 446 to become one of the finest opaques in the borosilicate world.


Working Tip: Work this color in a neutral flame.  Garage at 975° F, Anneal at 1050° F.

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Cobalt-5, 515 Rods
One of our most popular cobalt colors, Cobalt-5, 515 provides the artist with a highly saturated, easy to work blue.

Working Tip: Work in neutral flame to avoid reduction (gray streaks).

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Peacock, 546 Rods

Peacock, 546 was designed as part of a series of 6 blues and greens to provide a range of hues and intensities that would work well with each other as well as set off the bright crayon colors. An easy to work dark opaque blue that is often copied but never duplicated.

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Triple Passion, 786 Rods
Triple Passion, 786 was introduced as an easy striking amber to purple color.  Due to its formulation this color quickly, easily and consistently strikes through a wide range of bright and delightful purples.  The use of color-changing borosilicate exploded soon after Glass Alchemy introduced this color to the market.  This is a must have in every glass studio!

Working Tip:  Get this color white hot to erase the striking history.  A variety of effects are achievable depending on how long you flame/kiln strike.

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Black Violet, 974 Rods
Black Violet, 974 was part of Glass Alchemy's initial introduction of colors.  At the time the market needed a black that did not boil and we introduced 3 new blacks to choose from.  Black Violet is a deep translucent that is extremely workable, great for beads and other sculptural projects.  It is popular because it flows together without transition lines, is very shiny and the surface does not easily reduce.

Working Tip:  Work this color hot using a neutral flame.

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Raven, 9749 Rods
Raven, 9749 was released in early 2004 as a deeper opaque black then our earlier releases.  As artists continue to push the envelope, we respond by filling the void.  This is a saturated green, violet and blue.  (We will have to saturate the red as well on the next black we release!). For a saturated black, this is a surprisingly easy color to melt and shape.

Working Tip: Work in neutral flame.  If you flash heat in a reducing flame as you finish the project you can produce a look similar to the sheen of a raven's wing.

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Eclipse, 9977 Rods

This next generation black is a true black.  When pulled down thin, it maintains a smoky black color, versus  purple, green or blue like other blacks on the market. Described by many as “bullet proof”, Eclipse does not contain any chrome, so graying and checking are not a major concern.


Working Tip: This color can handle different flame atmospheres but as always, we recommend working in a neutral flame.

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12 Item(s)
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