A puff of glass

General

Description

Originally broadcast as a segment of the television program Johns Hopkins File 7 on December 21, 1957 from the studios of WJZ in Baltimore, Md. Black and white. Lynn Poole, producer; Kennard Calfee, director; Berlin B. Benfield, writer; produced by WJZ Television Station in Baltimore, Md. for the ABC Television Network. Lynn Poole, John Lehman, John Gryder, presenters. Digitized in 2004.

Abstract

Fourth generation glassblower John Lehman makes a glass trap for a vacuum system as specified by chemistry professor John Gryder. Mr. Lehman and Dr. Gryder explain the process of making the glass piece, including "pulling points," using both cross fires and torch to heat the glass as it evolves. A brief film explores the history of glass, from volcanic obsidian to the man-made glass of the Egyptians. In 300 B.C. the blowpipe was invented, opening the way to new uses of glass. At the first American colony in Jamestown, Virginia, Captain John Smith built a glass factory. A film shows a reenactment of an early American glassblower making a bottle. Dr. Gryder displays historical tools still used in the art plus modern ones that have been added. Manufacturers of glass have changed the assumed properties of glass, making it pliant, strong, heat and cold resistant, etc. for new functions. Mr. Lehman completes the glass piece, inserts it in the vacuum system, and tests it for leaks.
Title Language
Dates

Date Published

1957-12-21
Publisher
Language
Identifiers

OCLC Number

55057608

Collection Number

COLL-0008

Item Barcode

mq2420054mmmmm
Resources
Resource Type
Moving Image

Extent

00:29:00hh:mm:ss
Contributor
Broadcaster (brd): ABC Television Network
Director (drt): Calfee, Kennard
Production personnel (prd): Gryder, John
Production personnel (prd): Lehman, John
Production personnel (prd): Poole, Lynn
Producer (pro): Poole, Lynn
Screenwriter (aus): Benfield, Berlin
Copyright and Use
System
Access Rights
Public digital access
Model
Video

Unique ID

63ceaec7-e202-4ea2-bc05-b5ebe6e67b81