Make a Glass Bottle Creation at Home

AI Thread Summary
Making a glass bottle creation at home is possible by heating a glass bottle and then introducing cold water, but caution is essential to avoid cracking. Safety gear, including goggles, gloves, and an apron, is strongly recommended during the process. The specific heating duration and temperature remain unclear, and it's advised to start with a dry bottle to prevent explosions. Participants express a desire for more detailed guidance and resources on glassblowing techniques. Overall, safety and proper technique are critical for attempting this project.
jordan101
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Is it possible to make one of these at home using an everyday glass bottle? If so could anyone tell me how?

Thanks
 
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Well wikipedia says that it is produced by cooling a hot bottle rapidly on the inside and slowly on the outside. So if you heat the bottle in a fire and pour cold water inside it might work. But of course that might cause the bottle to crack so wear safety goggles.
 
Thanks! I kinda thought this would be how to do it. The thing is I have no clue how long to heat the bottle, what temperature to heat it at, or how cold the water should be.

:confused:
 
Me neither, but there must be sites about glas blower techniques online.
 
Anyone know how to do this?

Thanks
 
jordan101 said:
Anyone know how to do this?

Thanks

I would recommend using gloves and an apron and eye protection.
 
I will definatley take safety precautions for sure, Just don't know how long to heat it befor tipping the cold water in
 
jordan101 said:
I will definatley take safety precautions for sure, Just don't know how long to heat it befor tipping the cold water in

I'm replying mainly because I get the idea that you are going to try this and want to make sure you understand that you should be wearing your safety gear even for your "tests", your "pre-test tests" and everything in between.

BTW, I have never done this either.

Make sure you start with a bottle that is dry. I've seen beer bottles explode when they had some liquid left in them at campsites when put in a fire. Might have been because of a thermal gradient along the length of the bottle, but who knows.
 
Thanks for the info! I won't even think of trying this before I know exactly what I should be doing.

Cheers
 
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