Here is a guide to some of the terminology you may encounter on our Website:
Millefiori
Beads : Known as thousand flowers, lace beads or mosaic, these
Murano beads have been popular since those early days. The Venetian
bead is made by first gathering a small ball of clear or matching
color transparent glass, then rolling the ball over small slices
of the millefiori cane or carefully placing them on the ball. The
bead maker continues rotating and evenly heating the bead until
the millefiori slices are completely formed into the bead.
Sommerso Beads: Sommerso means submerged and is a description of how
this bead is made, small flecks of color, often aventurina (aventurina
is the Veneziana spelling, while avventurina is the Italian spelling)
are suspended inside transparent glass. It is a simple Venetian
bead, usually less expensive but very popular.
Fiorato
Beads : Decorated with flowers, as fiore means flower in Italian,
this word means small flowers. The bead can be made in any technique,
gold foil, silver foil, sommerso, however on the outside there will
be a small flower which is drawn using molten stringers of colored
glass. Often there are also decorations on the exterior of aventurina
piping. Venetian Fiorato beads require more skill than sommerso
for making.
Gold
Foil, White Gold and Silver Foil: Murano Beads made by first
making a small ball of the glass and then rolling the molten glass
ball across thin sheets of 24kt gold foil, 24kt white gold foil
or .925 sterling silver. The bead with this foil exterior is then
completed by gently melting on top of the foil transparent colors
of Moretti Murano glass. The 24kt gold foil under the colors gives
it a rich glow, enhancing the color, while the 24kt white gold foil
gives the bead a softer shade of color, refined and warm. Using
.925 sterling silver, the true color of the glass is brightened
and becomes crisp. The white gold is an alloy with 18kt gold foil
and white colored metals, the same as in fine jewelry.
Blown
Beads: The blown beads are the only beads made in a real Murano
glass furnace or in small laboratories using "glory holes".
They are made using a technique called filigrana the glass blower
first takes a blowpipe and rolls over canes of colored glass giving
the striping in each bead. They may be finished in spirals, or straight
striping, and may be balls, or teardrop shape or our very popular
pennies which are balls which have been flattened. The Venetian
Blown beads may also be made in lampwork technique, or perle a lume
(in Italian). In the case where they are made in lampwork, they
begin with a larger cane of the Moretti glass which they melt into
a soft ball on the end of a small blow pipe. Our blown Venetian
Glass Hearts are made in this fashion, while our other Blown Beads
are made in the filigrana technique.
Dichroic
Beads : Our Venetian Dichroic beads take a long journey to reach
you. The glass begins as sheets in the Moretti factory in Murano.
These sheets of glass are exported to Los Angeles, California where
high tech equipment applies the coatings under vacuum. A final trip
back to Murano and our beadmakers incorporate tiny chips of the
dichroic into the traditional Venetian beads producing a marvelous
mixture of old world style and modern technology. The dichroic beads
are individual - no two ever alike and held in the sunlight will
appear different as a result of the coatings. They are spectacular
and unique. VenetianBeadShop.com introduced these Venetian Dichroic
Beads working with their beadmakers in Murano.
Lampwork Beads: Many people do not think of Venetian Beads as Lampwork,
however, lampwork simply means that the beads have been worked over
a flame. This has the same technique for thousands of years, only
the energy source has changed. All beads made in Venice and Murano
are lampwork beads. Venetian beads have been associated largely
with the production styles which have been sold for the past thirty
to forty years. However, in researching the history of beads, you
will find that for centuries, the Muranese and Venetians have been
making beads with the dots now associated with lampwork. Visit our
Lampwork bead section
and see some Venetian Lampwork Beads.
Furnace
Glass: Since most beads are made from the Moretti (and now a
new company just outside Venice called VetroFondo) our Furnace Glass
Beads are different in that they are made by real glass blowers
in real Murano Glass Furnaces. The glass is different from the softer
Moretti glass, even though the composition is still soda. The glass
used in this furnace is more like pyrex in that the glassblowers
can blow these to very thin walls and that each bead is annealed
in the oven overnight insuring that all stresses are relieved. This
makes for a very strong bead. We use the zanfirico method for many
of the beads. All the canes used in these beads are made on the
premises of this furnace.
Whatever
the style of the bead or the technique used in making it, Venetian
beads are popular and valued in jewelry. It's the mystic of that
beautiful island, it's strong people and the sense of style we have
all come to know as Venetian Beads or Murano Beads.
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