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Projects

Glassometry Studios designs and fabricates a diverse range of custom sculpture and architectural installations.

We are always creating new works whether for clients or the studio.  Here you can catch a glimpse of the process, people, and how things come together.   If you have a project in mind we are happy to meet and discuss options whether for indoor or outdoor, public or private, glass and metal provide a wide variety of options for décor and sculpture

Prior to the opening, Glassometry Studios had the pleasure of completing two quite significant commissions in the new space.  One was a beautiful glass and steel suspension bridge sculpture designed for Kiewit Bridge and Marine Headquarters in Vancouver, WA.  The second was a pair of custom glass and steel bus shelters for Smart Transit in Wilsonville, OR, a Federal Stimulus Project.  You can read and see more about these commissions under our projects page.  You can also view and read about the construction of the studio in Laurel Blog.

Here’s one of our happy neighbors who commissioned us to create this colorful piece for her living room.

Projects recently or presently being completed include a custom tile and sink produced for a client in the Dalles.  This design required a good deal of hand cutting, fusing, and finish work.  The tiles will be mortared and grouted in place with the sink raised.

Here are images from a kitchen we are producing cast glass counters, backsplash and lighting for.  The glass is all custom cast utilizing recycled glass for the bulk of the material.

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Another project involves a more playful theme.  Here are images of the illustrations that will be translated into glass panels.  Right now we are producing samples to test out how we want the final product to look.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here is Britney working on all the parts that will be hand cut and become part of an illustrative glass panel for a custom home project.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here are the samples being fired to test how we will accomplish the glass illustration on the left.  There are a great number of effects and finishes that can be created through the kiln-forming process.  Samples and firing tests are essential to the final product.