for table or other domestic usage, taking form in the hands of the adroit workers. It is the scene of an intense and a highly ingenious activity. The bottles and dishes and globes intended for sub-sequent treatment in the atelier are all blown, the manipulations being varied in accordance with the special form it is desired to produce. As a rule, it may be said that it is cheaper to produce the pressed glass than the blown, since less time is required in
It is in this way that the blanks are prepared for the atelier proper. Here one finds a number of very interesting operations going on side by side. The untechnical visitor will perhaps be most attracted by the cutting process, since the results are so brilliant, and the articles possess so staple a value. He will get a good insight into the general principles by following the process of cutting a carafe.