vrinner
Well-known member
Anyone here an expert on making sundials? I just finished a commission for a guy in Canada for their 15 year anniversary. There is a lot to getting these things right and making a vertical hanging one out of glass technically wasn't that challenging as a glass maker, but had an issue with materials and then layout.
For the materials, using a clear glass was the wrong choice for the green hour lines section. The shadow the gnome cast could only be barely seen on the black painted lines. Using something more opaque is definitely needed for that section.
For the layout issue the customer told me, outside on a south facing wall (specific lat/long location). After I had it built he said he wanted to hang it inside in the window looking out south. So that means the numbers are actually backwards. So I guess technically this wasn't a mistake on my end but still I need to make that more clear next time.
I had offered to basically remake the entire project again but he said that this gift is more about the meaning than the function. His wife's grandfather was a glass artist, and they have been married for a long "time" and the sundial kind of represents both. So he was totally happy with it just the way it is.
I didn't get a great full picture of the back bracing but because it's just all lead, for this piece the bottom and center sections would want to pull apart from each other over time if I didn't add some sort of bracing. For windows that are more traditional, there are usually plenty of lead lines going vertical that will either add to strength or give a pathway to add heavier metal bracing. So for this piece I used some 10 gauge copper wire around the back side. It made this piece rock solid.




For the materials, using a clear glass was the wrong choice for the green hour lines section. The shadow the gnome cast could only be barely seen on the black painted lines. Using something more opaque is definitely needed for that section.
For the layout issue the customer told me, outside on a south facing wall (specific lat/long location). After I had it built he said he wanted to hang it inside in the window looking out south. So that means the numbers are actually backwards. So I guess technically this wasn't a mistake on my end but still I need to make that more clear next time.
I had offered to basically remake the entire project again but he said that this gift is more about the meaning than the function. His wife's grandfather was a glass artist, and they have been married for a long "time" and the sundial kind of represents both. So he was totally happy with it just the way it is.
I didn't get a great full picture of the back bracing but because it's just all lead, for this piece the bottom and center sections would want to pull apart from each other over time if I didn't add some sort of bracing. For windows that are more traditional, there are usually plenty of lead lines going vertical that will either add to strength or give a pathway to add heavier metal bracing. So for this piece I used some 10 gauge copper wire around the back side. It made this piece rock solid.









