When I meet a new client, I usually have the three glass samples shown above in my bag. I have made hundreds of these over the years as I experiment with the colour and texture of overlapping stripes of vitreous enamel and iron oxide on clear glass, but these three are somehow the best and most admired. On the latest occasion my client liked the samples so much that she wanted a design for the glass panels in two bathroom doors based on the idea of the colour sample.
Once I’d worked out the best proportions for the horizontal and vertical bands on the tall thin door panels, I set to work on new sets of colour samples using an etched, therefore transluscent rather than transparent, glass. One set was based on a golden colour range, the other set needed to coordinate with the bathroom’s terracotta tiled walls and floor. It’s hard mixing transparent glass enamels to match a colour, particularly in the warm orange range where things easily go towards brown - as you can see in the nine samples for this project in my studio window (above right). As much as the amounts of each powdered enamel you put in the mix, the result is affected by how you apply the enamel, in this case I hand painted (as opposed to printing or spraying) to achieve the textures in the original favourite samples.
On the table (below left) you can see the glass on my lightbox with the vertical stripes fired on and the samples I’m trying to match above them. The finished panels (below right) show the second layer of horizontal bands in a contrasting but paler colour range of greys, greens and some blue.
The panels are finished and installed before the rest of the rooms are ready - so fingers crossed for their safety while work goes on around them. Both sets of colours are good, not exactly the same as the samples of course, with some unexpected mixes and welcome blemishes. The best aspect of the painting is that I have kept the layers light and thin which is a good glass painting tip - it’s easier to add than to remove.