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Create To Stop Hate with Janel Foo

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Manage episode 306354246 series 3002936
Content provided by Chevonne Ariss - Rüna Glassworks. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Chevonne Ariss - Rüna Glassworks or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In ep. 07 I'm joined by Janel Foo of Janel Foo Glassworks. Janel’s making the world not only a more beautiful place with her colorful geometric Art Deco inspired glass work but also using her platform as an artist to do some really powerful activism work in ways we can all take notes from. The AAPI community has seen a staggering uptick of hate crime in the last year that left us all disgusted and heartbroken. Janel saw an opportunity and jumped into the fight for good and the butterfly affect of her positive actions are still growing.
Join me as I crack it all wide open!
Watch us have our conversation and see the art, people and places we're speaking about on my youtube channel HERE.
To see more of Janel's work her instagram is @janelfooglassworks
and her website is janelfoo.com.
Honorable mentions:
createtostophate.com
stopaapihate.org

Top Chefs-
Melissa King
@kristinlkish
Mei Lin
Writers-
Ocean Vuong
Cathy Park Hong
Photographer -
Michael Jang
Comedian-
aliwong.com

Janel's favorite artists:
Windy Chien
windychien.com
@windychien

Beth Naumann
bethnaumann.com
@beth.naumann
PINK GLASS:
"It's true there is gold in some pinks (usually the warmer ones), but most of the bluer cooler pinks have erbium. There are no dyes involved in glass colors, the glass is all melted from raw materials in weight proportions just like a recipe; this mix is called 'batch' and generally includes compounds + raw materials that add color (copper, tin, cobalt, gold, etc.) So that's true for basically all the glass we use for stained glass, and the toxicity isn't really different between the colors - the most toxic part of the process is when the materials are being mixed and the furnaces are being charged as it's a lot of toxic airborne particles floating around. There are issues with emissions from the melting of the materials, but that's typically stuff that can be solved with how the factory is built - although this problem has greatly changed our industry in the US because some of our factories were in the middle of now-thriving cities. What makes pinks so expensive though is that they burn out way faster than blues & greens - meaning if you melt an entire furnace of a gold-pink glass, you can only use some portion of it before the color burns out, pinks being the shortest of all the colors. Since these colors are meant to be replicable, when the color starts to burn out and doesn't match the color standard, the glass has to be used for something else, or this is what sometimes becomes limited runs."
TY Leslie Green of @bespokeglass for this info!
The Stained Glass Association of America
The Professional Trade Association for Architectural Art Glass
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
Support the Show.

  continue reading

53 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 306354246 series 3002936
Content provided by Chevonne Ariss - Rüna Glassworks. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Chevonne Ariss - Rüna Glassworks or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In ep. 07 I'm joined by Janel Foo of Janel Foo Glassworks. Janel’s making the world not only a more beautiful place with her colorful geometric Art Deco inspired glass work but also using her platform as an artist to do some really powerful activism work in ways we can all take notes from. The AAPI community has seen a staggering uptick of hate crime in the last year that left us all disgusted and heartbroken. Janel saw an opportunity and jumped into the fight for good and the butterfly affect of her positive actions are still growing.
Join me as I crack it all wide open!
Watch us have our conversation and see the art, people and places we're speaking about on my youtube channel HERE.
To see more of Janel's work her instagram is @janelfooglassworks
and her website is janelfoo.com.
Honorable mentions:
createtostophate.com
stopaapihate.org

Top Chefs-
Melissa King
@kristinlkish
Mei Lin
Writers-
Ocean Vuong
Cathy Park Hong
Photographer -
Michael Jang
Comedian-
aliwong.com

Janel's favorite artists:
Windy Chien
windychien.com
@windychien

Beth Naumann
bethnaumann.com
@beth.naumann
PINK GLASS:
"It's true there is gold in some pinks (usually the warmer ones), but most of the bluer cooler pinks have erbium. There are no dyes involved in glass colors, the glass is all melted from raw materials in weight proportions just like a recipe; this mix is called 'batch' and generally includes compounds + raw materials that add color (copper, tin, cobalt, gold, etc.) So that's true for basically all the glass we use for stained glass, and the toxicity isn't really different between the colors - the most toxic part of the process is when the materials are being mixed and the furnaces are being charged as it's a lot of toxic airborne particles floating around. There are issues with emissions from the melting of the materials, but that's typically stuff that can be solved with how the factory is built - although this problem has greatly changed our industry in the US because some of our factories were in the middle of now-thriving cities. What makes pinks so expensive though is that they burn out way faster than blues & greens - meaning if you melt an entire furnace of a gold-pink glass, you can only use some portion of it before the color burns out, pinks being the shortest of all the colors. Since these colors are meant to be replicable, when the color starts to burn out and doesn't match the color standard, the glass has to be used for something else, or this is what sometimes becomes limited runs."
TY Leslie Green of @bespokeglass for this info!
The Stained Glass Association of America
The Professional Trade Association for Architectural Art Glass
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
Support the Show.

  continue reading

53 episodes

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