CarlLBC
Well-Known Member
you could cut the bottoms off and use them as a light fixture. the pendants kind that hang down. not sure what the heat of the light bulb would do to the glass though.
you could cut the bottoms off and use them as a light fixture. the pendants kind that hang down. not sure what the heat of the light bulb would do to the glass though.
I just tried this tonight. It went very well.
The next task is to go out and find a bottle that would look awesome. Any thoughts?
Joshua
I feel so old. In the early 70's (I was about 12-14) I had one of these kits. I especially remembering making a set of juice glasses from Michelob bottles. Memories.![]()
Back in the 70's there was a norleco or some such kit that you could easily do it, it was a glass cutter on an arm that you set and the right hieght, you put the bottle on a little turner and scribed/cut it, then you sanded or filed the lip down. But it is still pretty easy to do, there;s a few instructables online here.
http://www.instructables.com/id/Drinking-Glasses-from-Wine-Bottles/
Pretty easy
I'd like to cut the bottlom off, flip the thing upside down, and glue a base of some sort to the neck. Nice tall goblet. Don't care too much about a tumbler.
Yeah, we did that too, but melting thin glass tubing is altogether different than trying to melt just the rim of of bottle. I think the glass is different for one thing and you would need to heat the entire tumbler evenly in order to avoid heat stress cracks.
You could make the base of the tumbler out of the base of the bottle that you just cut off.
Back in the 70's there was a norleco or some such kit that you could easily do it, it was a glass cutter on an arm that you set and the right hieght, you put the bottle on a little turner and scribed/cut it, then you sanded or filed the lip down. But it is still pretty easy to do, there;s a few instructables online here.
http://www.instructables.com/id/Drinking-Glasses-from-Wine-Bottles/
Pretty easy
You're right! Like this. At the guys site (from the video) he mentions using UV glue to join glass. Might not be strong enough, but heck I'd give it a try.
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