These two are actually small enough for soft glass (most of the molds I see work better for boro and are huge). I'm sure many soft glass users are just baffled by them, however. "It's not a press and it doesn't have a mandrel slot."
I do want to give you a close look at these so you can see the scale of them, and understand that they are a concave mold - because the photos do that tricky thing where they seem to reverse themselves and appear to stand out, and then recede.
Go on - stare at those two faces - raised, inverted, raised, inverted.
There - that makes it clear - it's a cavity.
It's "Mc-Cavity - the mystery cat"
This also makes the size of them clear too - the face mold is about an inch long for the entire mold - the face itself is 17 mm long and about 5 mm deep at the bridge of the nose. The cat is a little deeper.
I just did a couple of quick ones to see how they worked - needed more glass here to fill up the ears. I just melted a gather of glass on the end of a rod and pushed it in. Make sure the mold is on the table by the way - it's going to get hot.
Did a pick-up of frit on this gather first - and put the gather on the end of an old, bent mandrel.
If you don't firepolish the heck out of it - the detail is quite nice.
The picture is crap - but the faces came out quite nice - ready to be embellished or integrated into something else.
If nothing else, you could make some nice little cabochons with these.
If you see them languishing on a sale table somewhere - pick one or two up.
They are practically collector's items now!
Hey Dwyn? ABR Imagery has a bunch of Burgard molds in stock, including the 2 you show here.
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