The Glass Forge studios' Lee Wassink and Nathan Sheafor, create these handblown Champagne Glasses in Rainbow Frit colors.
- Handblown in the USA
- Size: 9.5" tall
- Two-piece set
- Shipping: approximately two to four weeks
SHIPPING POLICY
1. Free Ground Shipping: On most items - $150.00 and over, and under 25 lbs.
…
2. Ground Shipping Charges: 0 - $149.99 = $18.00 (USPS, FedEx, and UPS only)
…
3. Freight Charges: Larger items, for example, furniture.
…
4. International Orders: Must contact us first:
…
For any shipping requirement other than free ground shipping, please call (845) 679-2622, or email
Due to the nature of handcrafted work, subtle variations are natural.
About Lee Wassink, Founder, Master Glass Artist
"I originally took a glass blowing class during my sophomore year in college at Central College in Pella, Iowa, not thinking anything of it. Of course, after that, the romance of glass occupied my mind. I took two more years of it from John Vruwink, while finishing my college education and was able to get fully hooked. After graduation, I moved to southern Oregon and spent a year helping my Dad build his 'dream house.' In the process, I realized that I would return to Grants Pass. During this time, while making trips to the Bay Area, I courted the Nourot Glass Studio, finally getting them to hire me just as we were finishing the house. Working for Nourot Glass Studio and the three owners, Mike and Ann Nourot and David Lindsay was the biggest glass learning curve yet for me. While working with them for four years, I found out that it was truly the art that I wanted to continue for the rest of my life. When it came time to leave the Bay Area and move back to Grants Pass, I got the opportunity to take a two-week intensive course from Bill Gudenrath at the Corning 'Studio.' By the time I came back after contacting Nathan and Butch, I was able to look for a building to start our studio and the rest, as they say, 'is history.'"
About Nathan Sheafor, Co-founder, Art Glass Craftsman
"My first contact with the medium of glass was in a vision of sorts while participating in a pottery workshop in the desert near Moab, UT. The instructor wanted the class to visualize a container to hold water from a beautiful stream. I saw the shape in clear crystal, not clay. Shortly thereafter, a pottery and glass professor at the University of Kansas, Vernon Brejcha, thought that I would be better suited to working with glass than clay and directed me to the world of the molten material. I have been attached to it ever since being driven by the desire to make the perfect goblet, graceful lines, rich colors, and a certain physical intensity that reflect my nature."