Messy Color™ Bing Ltd Run

511111 - Sold Out

Bing Ltd Run (511111)<br />A transparent red.

A transparent red.




“Bing is much more transparent, with some mistiness evident inside the spacers, but you can still see through to the mandrel hole.” Read more at Heather’s blog. – Heather Kelly

Click here for other interesting Bing Ltd Run discoveries.

 
Bing Ltd Run
Trudi Doherty
Bing Ltd Run
Jolene Wolfe
Messy Bing
Laura Sparling
CiM Bing
Darlene Collette


Bing with Double Helix Triton Frit encased in Effetre Clear
Darlene Collette

CiM Tester Feedback

  • Special thanks to Jolene Wolfe for providing the photo in this section.

Join Trudi Doherty's FB group Lampwork Colour Resource Sharing Information for a catalogue of color study.
Claudia Eidenbenz’s "Vetrothek" (glass library) is a great resource for color comparisons.
See Kay Powell’s frit testing samples.
Browse Serena Thomas’ color gallery.
Check out Miriam Steger’s CiM color charts.
Consult Jolene Wolfe's glass testing resource page.


"Firecracker, Kniphofia, & Bing all get the beautiful pink with Clio."
Suzy Hannabuss
"When it is blown out to be paper thin, Bing is more of a flaming bright orange. A very intense orange, to be sure. But no longer red." Read more at DragonJools blog.
Dwyn Tomlinson
"To achieve consistent Bing colour results, I made a bead, brought it out of the flame until all the heat glow had disappeared plus about five seconds, then reheated it in the top section of my flame until a uniform redness covered the bead. Same as striking Sangre, really." Read more at Laura's blog.
Laura Sparling
“The top is a clear cylinder, with stripes of [from the left], Rudolph, Firecracker, Maraschino, Bing. And the con-joined bead on the bottom is the same order, from the left, Rudolph, Firecracker, Maraschino, Bing.” Read more at DragonJools blog.
Dwyn Tomlinson
“Bing is much more transparent, with some mistiness evident inside the spacers, but you can still see through to the mandrel hole.” Read more at Heather’s blog.
Heather Kelly
"Bing looks very different when used for dots, the orange tone is more apparent and the results are very pretty, like strawberry jelly." Read more at Kitzbitz Art Glass' blog.
Jolene Wolfe