Small Cone Former Mold

$23.95 USD
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Product Features

  • Create an indoor garden – no watering needed!
  • 3-dimensional ceramic mold can be fired many times
  • Makes life-like small lilies and petunias


Product Description

Create beautiful bouquets and show stopping garden accents! Small Cone Former Mold is ideal for making flowers with deep drops in center and organic ruffled petals such as small lilies and petunias. Ceramic molds can be fired many times. Must be kiln washed before use. See size perspective of mold with quarter and book images shown. Group of three small, medium and large cones pictured side by side for easy comparison. Measures 3-1/2" diameter by 2" high.

Step-By-Step: Slumping 3-D Flowers
Step 1. Trace the slumping mold onto a piece of paper, so you know how large your glass can be. Begin arranging glass on this pattern, starting with the flower base glass. Step 2. Arrange flower petal glass in layers and fuse. Step 3. Arrange the fused flower on top of the mold and slump.

Find projects that incorporate this mold in the Fused Glass Flowers Book #806140. Images courtesy of Creative Paradise. Last two images display flowers created with this mold.

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3 out of 5 stars
  •   small cone flow mold
By on
Pros : This mold makes delightful little centers that really bring an added dimension to the flowers.
Cons : The molded glass is difficult to remove from the mold. I find I need to tap around the glass (sometimes quite vigorously) to release it, and eventually the molds break. Although I did get a dozen or so firings from them. The large cone doesn't seem to have this problem.
Other Thoughts : Perhaps if the mold material was thicker in the cone it wouldn't be as fragile.
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3 of 3 people found this review helpful
3 out of 5 stars
  •   small cone flow mold
By on
Pros : This mold makes delightful little centers that really bring an added dimension to the flowers.
Cons : The molded glass is difficult to remove from the mold. I find I need to tap around the glass (sometimes quite vigorously) to release it, and eventually the molds break. Although I did get a dozen or so firings from them. The large cone doesn't seem to have this problem.
Other Thoughts : Perhaps if the mold material was thicker in the cone it wouldn't be as fragile.
Was this review helpful to you?  
2 of 2 people found this review helpful

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