Title: Windows to Learning: A Stained Glass Experience
1Windows to Learning A Stained Glass Experience
- Mrs. Amy McCabe
- Batesville High School
- Drawing/Painting and Advanced Art Classes
2Batesville High School Batesville, IN
Batesville straddles Ripley and Franklin counties
in southeastern Indiana - falling in the triangle
between Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Louisville.
We are home to Hillenbrand Industries
Batesville Caskets and Hill-Rom Hospital
Furniture. The rural community boasts many
family dairy and hog farms and is near shiny
riverboat casinos.
We have tremendous community support for the arts
in Batesville Rural Alliance for the Arts and
its Arts in Education program, the Rockwood
Foundation, and the Hillenbrand Foundation all
provide financial support and organizational
resources.
3Batesville High School Batesville, IN
Batesville High School has just under 700
students in grades 9-12 and 40 teachers. We run
a modified block schedule, meeting for 85 minutes
each day for 4 1/2 weeks per academic
quarter. The Art department consists of 1
full-time teacher and 1 teacher who is shared
with our Primary School.
Art courses offered are Introduction to Art,
Drawing/Painting, Advanced Art, AP Studio Art,
Art History, Ceramics, and Advanced Ceramics.
4Objectives
- Experience the artist/client relationship as
students design a commissioned piece. - Design site-specific artwork with a visiting
artist. - Transfer previous mastery of color and shape to a
different medium. - Promote visual arts around our school building
5Materials Needed
- Design Stage Drawing paper, pencils, colored
chalk or markers, permanent marker, tracing
paper, visual references, T-square - Glass Cutting Stage Stained Glass, Running
Pliers, Grozing pliers, Glass cutters, glass
grinder, Plywood board, masking tape - Soldering Stage Copper foil, Flux, Tin solder,
Soldering Irons, Zinc Channel for edges (opt.) - Safety Items Safety Glasses REQUIRED! Lots of
Band-Aids, too!
Indiana Standards 1,3,4,6,7,8,9,10,11,12 Nationa
l Standards 1,2,3,4,5
6The Process
7Select Sites and Groups
- I emailed school staff to solicit window sites.
We have a waiting list a few years long. -
- Students chose their own workgroups and were
randomly assigned to classrooms. - The freedom and responsibility of choosing
teammates worked for and against the students
essential, authentic skill development.
8Client Meeting
- They next met with the class teacher to gather
client expectations classroom-specific subject
matter, teacher-specific subject ideas, color and
style preferences, etc. -
- Through these meetings, students quickly learned
that some clients are very specific in their
request, but others allow more artistic
expression.
9Assemble Visual File
- Students assembled a visual file in their
sketchbooks of potential reference images.
Multiple views of all objects were expected. - This homework assignment required all students
participation and provided the foundation for
collaboration.
10Preliminary Design
- Students next met with a local painter and former
graphic designer who guided them through the
realities of balancing client satisfaction with
good design.
11- I gave them a crash course on what types of
shapes and lines are realistic for stained glass
and they adapted their colored drawings
appropriately. - Keep it simple became the motto as they were
forced to stylize and develop a new visual
vocabulary for this new medium.
12Client Approval
- Once preliminary designs were complete, students
met with their teacher for approval or changes to
the plan.
13Scale Drawing and Tracing
- Final designs were drawn to the EXACT dimensions
of the final piece onto white roll paper. - Lines of glass planes were outlined in black
Sharpie.
14- Color was added to give a general indication for
reference.
15- This paper was taped to a larger plywood board
which had been fitted with squaring rules. - Students traced the design, piece by piece, onto
a tracing paper overlay.
16Cutting glass is very easy for high school
students. Cutting glass accurately is not so
easy
17Cutting and Grinding
- For practice, students first cut out 2-3 pieces
for a practice project I designed for our local
arts auction. - They learned that they need to cut the tracing
paper neatly, trace it exactly, cut carefully,
and grind it until it is perfect!
18- We went through lots of glass learning how
NOT to break with pliers and used up a grinder
bit learning why it is easier to cut accurately
than to grind a lot later.
19Clean and tape down glass
- Students took these lessons to heart as they
worked in groups selecting appropriate panes and
cutting and them and grinding to fit.
20- Each pane should be cleaned before taping it in
place. - The most successful groups started in the square
corner and worked their way out, taping their
panes together as they fit them. This minimized
shifting while they worked. - Each day, students had to stack up their work
boards in the back of the room, so shifting was a
very real issue for those who did not tape.
21Wrap with Copper Foil
- Once all pieces were cut, students wrapped the
glass panes of the practice window and then their
group projects. - Make sure that the copper foil overlaps onto both
sides of the glass and is crimped adequately.
22Poor craftsmanship (leaving grinder dust, uneven
taping, loose tape) creates nightmares while
soldering.
23At this point, they should measure again. More
than one time. And once more, just to check!
Make any necessary adjustments.
24Flux, then Solder both sides
- Soldering is another easy task. Soldering neatly
is a bit harderit truly is an art to keep the
solder lines smooth, full, but not overflowing on
large pieces. - Flux the area to be soldered, then apply solder.
- Once the whole side is completed, flip the piece
over and solder the reverse.
25Frame
- Edges may be wrapped in zinc channel or finished
in some other fashion depending on the
application.
26Clean and Install
- Be sure you have very clean stained glass and
very clean window glass Fingerprints can be
very obvious. - Installation for our project required removing
the window strips, sandwiching the completed
panes up against the safety glass, and replacing
strips.
27The Finished Works...
28Mid Point Evaluation
29Final Evaluation
30Past Stained Glass Projects at BHS
Four Seasons Fountain Copper and Stained
Glass Spring 2003
31Landforms 5 Stained Glass PanelsSpring 2000