Oceanside Waterglass Glass Pack

$73.95 USD
In Stock
Usually ships in 1 to 2 business days.

  • Subtle wave texture is consistant and easy-to-cut
  • Transparent glass makes tracing patterns easy
  • Each piece is clearly labeled to make re-ordering your favorites simple
  • 6 pieces, 7" x 8" each

Product Description

Add a subtle wave to your next project. The Oceanside Waterglass in this pack is all lightly textured cathedral and ideal for backgrounds, water and sky scenes plus much more. Contains 6 pieces, 7" x 8" each. Ideal for stained glass and mosaics. Can be fused but texture may cause air bubbles. 96 COE.

Glass pieces are marked with item numbers for easy reordering. Pricing includes boxing charge. Photo is one example; actual glass may vary. Sizes are approximate.

Geometric project by artist Donald Kotz. Fused nautical compass rose was created with sea green and steel blue glass on a clear waterglass base. By artist Rance Moore of Salty Fiddler Art. Stained glass rainbow sunburst by artist Susan Dunham. Sunrise with rolling hills stained glass panel by artist Gwen Bonnie. All from Delphi's Online Artist Gallery.

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
5 star  
  8
4 star
  1
3 star
  1
2 star
  0
1 star
  0
See all 10 customer reviews
Write a customer review

Product Images from Customers

Be the first to share product images with other customers
5 out of 5 stars
  •   Great Glass, Lots of Options
By on
Pros : I love that this is 96 COE and Phenomenal for stained glass. Lots of uses, bold, brilliant colors
Cons :
Other Thoughts : This is a great selection for any ROYGBIV project you want to do (Red, Orange, yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet). It makes a great project when you cut it into strips and fuse into a project But also great in a stained glass project.
Was this review helpful to you?  
3 of 3 people found this review helpful
3 out of 5 stars
  •   Decent
By on
Pros : Nice smooth quality
Cons : The orange is almost like a second yellow, like barely orange.
Was this review helpful to you?  
2 of 2 people found this review helpful
5 out of 5 stars
  •   Great Starter Pack
By on
Pros : Great pack of starter colors
Cons : none
Was this review helpful to you?  
2 of 2 people found this review helpful

See all 10 customer reviews
Related Content
May 10, 2010
When and how did you get started in stained glass? Ive been interested in stained glass for as long as I can remember. As a child, I would sit in churches and watch the (often) biblical depictions come to life when a stray ray of sunlight cast its illumination our way. Sun shadows dancing. I dabbled in many media over the years, trying to find an outlet for some of the visions careening inside, but none of them took. Drawing, painting - even watercolours - no amount of professional training could guide my hand in a satisfactory way. But then there was the glass. I lived abroad for a few years, and wound my way through Europe on my way back to the States when I finished my Peace Corps Service. My last international destination was Paris, where one of my closest friends lives as an organist. Two beautiful autumn
May 03, 2010
Delphi Glass and ArtFire, the premier marketplace for handmade crafts, announce a new online art contest. The Ring of Fire Artist Challenge is open to all artisans. Entries are being accepted now. Contest ends June 30 and winners announced July 9, 2010. Following its annual festivities for National Art Glass Month, Delphi has organized another online event with the help of its partner ArtFire. The first annual Ring of Fire Artist Challenge is designed for all artisans of all crafts and abilities, inviting them to use common art supplies in new and creative ways. Artisans are asked to choose one or more items from the 10 products that make up the Ring of Fire. These items range from patterned dichroic glass and fine silver wire to mosaic tiles made entirely from recycled glass. Winners are chosen by popular vote and jury based on technical skill and creativity. A beginners category
Apr 30, 2010
Chances are, right now, in reading this blog post, youre avoiding an overdue task. I too was avoiding a laundry list of work-related tasks in writing this. Procrastination is a part of life, and its certainly always been a part of mine. As a teenager, my parents would accuse me of putting off everything from piano practice to math homework. Id vehemently deny their charges hissing back, I work better under pressure. The truth was, I often felt overwhelmed, under-productive and anxious. Over the years, Ive been able to combat my avoidance issues using 4 tools. The trick is constantly reminding myself of these actions, because they do not come naturally to me. 1. Just Say No. I say yes to everything. Need someone to head up that event? Sure. Want me to design 12 posters for the Car Wash? No problem. Take your kid to daycare? Of course.