It was possible to host almost 40 guests in and around our house this weekend, thanks to Misery Loves Co. They made our party very festive even in a pouring rainfall. These guys work hard and the result is so ...good! All you need is a driveway and your friends: every guest walk up to the bus window, order from menu and pays. Favorites were the roastbeef and the squash frittatas. The french fries with rosemary got the highest and loudest praise this evening...
Next year we can hopefully add music and fire juggling, and we will have a festival !?
A Clear Story
Sketching up the clear stories.
Friday, August 3, 2012
Finally Friday, or actually I really enjoyed this week. My children have all been to Burlington summer camps. One of them had a blast at the Traditional Music camp held every year by the Parks and Recreation: they got to test Clog dance, Morris dance and listen to Bag pipe players... The other two did a sailing camp at Lake Champlain resulting in what can I say, one happy sailor and one happy tanned person... We are slowly getting a grip of the Burlington ways in the summer, finding out what to do and where.
One great event is the Farmer's Market, we are vendors on Saturday and mixing in amongst Vegetable stands, Jam stands, Flowers stands and more. A lot of fun and a very social way to show our work.
One great event is the Farmer's Market, we are vendors on Saturday and mixing in amongst Vegetable stands, Jam stands, Flowers stands and more. A lot of fun and a very social way to show our work.
The hearts are a part of our campaign 12.12.12. where we donate parts of the wholesale price to a linked Non-profit. The hearts are linked to VT Family Network and when we get larger orders they will also benefit. This is our way to reach out to our community in order to be a part of something larger.
Read more on our AO web site about other non-profit linked glass gift items!
Thursday, August 2, 2012
yoga book
A fun and educational children's book series is in the works. I met Susan Cline Lucey at Evolution Physical Therapy and Yoga a few years ago and asked her to write her kids yoga classes down as a story line, and then I started to sketch the kids in her class.
If you would like to know more about the progress please email to info@aoglass.com
Allright, hello all Clear Story blog readers.
I'm happy to be back. Facebook and websites in all honor, but blogging... it seems to connect me in a special way.
So, the update will be quite long since a lot happened this spring and summer.
This article sums up a lot of what we worked on at AO Glass Works during this period.
Article in Destination Vermont summer 2012
Story – AO Glass Works
By Lin Stone
Photos courtesy of AO Glass/ product photos Ben Sarle.
Their craft is traditional, but their approach to its place in the world is not. According to glassblowing artists and business partners Tove Ohlander and Rich Arentzen, owners of AO Glass, the best art should not be relegated to passive position of decorative dust collector, but it should actively participate in making the world a better, more beautiful place. The launch of AO’s 12.12.12 art glass campaign clearly serves that mission. The couple has designed 12 small glass objects that reflect critical environmental and humanitarian issues and they have collaborated with 12 nonprofit organizations to donate 12 percent of profits from the sale of these items to the partnering organizations.
Ohlander learned her craft in her homeland at Sweden’s Orrefors Technical Glass School, an area well known for its fine Swedish blown glass. Ohlander frequently uses a highly skilled Swedish decorative technique developed in the 1920s known as graal. With this technique, the glass is blown twice: it is made with a color overlay that is cut, etched, or sandblasted with decoration, and heated again in the furnace for fluidity before it is encased in clear glass and polished. This technique allows for an additional layer of graphic images and artistic personalized expressions.
The couple originally had a glass blowing studio in Norway, but Arentzen enticed Ohlander to move the family to Vermont, where he initially worked with Burlington’s Alan Goldfarb and made fine Italian style wine glasses. Later an opportunity arose at 416 Pine Street, and the couple opened AO’s glass-blowing studio.
Prompted by her younger sister who worked for the Swedish EPA, Ohlander had been challenged to come up with a philanthropic campaign that could serve as a model for other small start-up businesses and non-profit organizations.
Ohlander’s aha! moment occurred when she first considered, “Why are there [only] caps, t-shirts, and mugs with logos of the organization at every fundraising event? There are many talented craftmakers out there who can make inexpensive objects and who want to make things that could help organizations raise money too.” Thus began AO Glass Works’ 12.12.12 campaign. Ohlander concluded, “We can design art that can help to address the environmental and humanitarian issues of today and contribute through our art to building a better world too.”
AO Glass forged partnerships with several non-profit organizations and designed a line of modestly priced glass ornaments befitting the mission and image of each organization. AO’s socially invested art presently benefits Food4Farmers, Vermont Beekeepers, Polar Bears International, Special Olympics Vermont, Intervale Center, Local Motion, Vermont Family Network, Vermont Natural Resources Council, Vermont Coalition of Runaway and Homeless Youth, and the Vermont Family Network, Bat Conservation International, and the Make a Wish Foundation.
Visit AO Glassblowing studio and store on Pine Street in Burlington, take a class, or book an evening out for a glass-blowing demonstration and buy a little something. It could do a world of good.
For more information visit www.aoglass.com
Photos courtesy of AO Glass/ product photos Ben Sarle.
Their craft is traditional, but their approach to its place in the world is not. According to glassblowing artists and business partners Tove Ohlander and Rich Arentzen, owners of AO Glass, the best art should not be relegated to passive position of decorative dust collector, but it should actively participate in making the world a better, more beautiful place. The launch of AO’s 12.12.12 art glass campaign clearly serves that mission. The couple has designed 12 small glass objects that reflect critical environmental and humanitarian issues and they have collaborated with 12 nonprofit organizations to donate 12 percent of profits from the sale of these items to the partnering organizations.
Ohlander learned her craft in her homeland at Sweden’s Orrefors Technical Glass School, an area well known for its fine Swedish blown glass. Ohlander frequently uses a highly skilled Swedish decorative technique developed in the 1920s known as graal. With this technique, the glass is blown twice: it is made with a color overlay that is cut, etched, or sandblasted with decoration, and heated again in the furnace for fluidity before it is encased in clear glass and polished. This technique allows for an additional layer of graphic images and artistic personalized expressions.
The couple originally had a glass blowing studio in Norway, but Arentzen enticed Ohlander to move the family to Vermont, where he initially worked with Burlington’s Alan Goldfarb and made fine Italian style wine glasses. Later an opportunity arose at 416 Pine Street, and the couple opened AO’s glass-blowing studio.
Prompted by her younger sister who worked for the Swedish EPA, Ohlander had been challenged to come up with a philanthropic campaign that could serve as a model for other small start-up businesses and non-profit organizations.
Ohlander’s aha! moment occurred when she first considered, “Why are there [only] caps, t-shirts, and mugs with logos of the organization at every fundraising event? There are many talented craftmakers out there who can make inexpensive objects and who want to make things that could help organizations raise money too.” Thus began AO Glass Works’ 12.12.12 campaign. Ohlander concluded, “We can design art that can help to address the environmental and humanitarian issues of today and contribute through our art to building a better world too.”
AO Glass forged partnerships with several non-profit organizations and designed a line of modestly priced glass ornaments befitting the mission and image of each organization. AO’s socially invested art presently benefits Food4Farmers, Vermont Beekeepers, Polar Bears International, Special Olympics Vermont, Intervale Center, Local Motion, Vermont Family Network, Vermont Natural Resources Council, Vermont Coalition of Runaway and Homeless Youth, and the Vermont Family Network, Bat Conservation International, and the Make a Wish Foundation.
Visit AO Glassblowing studio and store on Pine Street in Burlington, take a class, or book an evening out for a glass-blowing demonstration and buy a little something. It could do a world of good.
For more information visit www.aoglass.com
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