Using Hard Water Deposits in Design

Recycled Fused Glass Vessel "Mineral Spiral"

Very rarely I get a batch of window glass that has hard water deposits on it. Most people throw this glass away because it appears useless (and is often the impetus for window replacement.) BUT,  some pretty cool things can happen with hard water deposits on glass that can be used in recycled glass art.

Here are some fabulous dishes as an example. I cleaned the glass really well, then wiped the hard water deposit side down with a dilute vinegar mix and fused with the hard water sides together.

Recycled Glass Art with Hard Water Depost

Recycled Glass Dishes

What I got was a myriad of tiny, tiny bubbles embedded between the layers of glass. The outside surface of the dishes is perfectly glassy.

Here is another example of using the hard water deposit as a design feature:

Recycled Glass Vessel

Recycled fused glass vessel with hard water deposits.

This vessel was created by cutting two circles from the same sheet of recycled window glass. The hard water deposits were centered on one side, so I had a clear circle and a minerally circle. I washed the mineral side very well, sprayed on a dilute vinegar solution and then used a flat x-acto knife blade to scrape stripes through the hard water deposits. This is a little bit like scraping stubborn frost off a windshield. When the scraped stripes were clear of mineral deposits, I cleaned it again, stacked the two circles, mineral side in and fused. The scraped stripes fused clear, with the hard water deposit in between creating millions of tiny bubbles.

Here is an example of another vessel where I cut multiple pie shaped pieces with hard water deposits and then stacked them during fusing for differing levels of opacity:

Recycled Glass Vessel

Recycled Glass Vessel with Hard Water deposits

And another with the glass cut into moon shapes and stacked into spirals to create different mineral layers.

Recycled Fused Glass Vessel

Recycled Fused Glass vessel with mineral deposits.

And a close up of all the tiny, tiny, bubbles!

Recycled Fused glass dish with tiny bubbles.

Recycled Fused Glass dish with hard water deposits.

Tips and Trouble Shooting:

  • If the gap is too small to slide pieces together, you’ll need to widen it with either a diamond file or a diamond bit on a dremel tool.  Use plenty of water and wear a mask.
  • Make sure the feet are level, if your vase isn’t balancing, you may need to grind the feet larger and flatter
  • If your fiber paper doesn’t come out cleanly, add water and dig it out with a skewer or hooked wire.
  • Yes, the vase can hold water

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