Spring 2010
Dinah Ihle Studio
Dinah Ihle, formerly a self-employed defense contractor, and husband Bob embraced the encouragement from their young daughter to start their own glass bead business, String Beads, in Salt Lake City, Utah. Since that time, Dinah has moved from being a torchworker toward fusing woven glass wall sculptures framed in prefabricated copper and steel. Most of Dinah’s work finds its way out of Salt Lake City through the relationships she has cultivated with various galleries.
by Colleen Bryan
You’ll also find out details for the 2010 Stained Glass Association of America Exhibition to be held in Kansas City, Missouri, and a preview of the Society of American Mosaic Artists’ upcoming Mosaic Arts International 2010 in Chicago, Illinois. The International Guild of Glass Artists shares some of the changes that can be found on its website, and you won’t want to miss a description of the delights in Detroit, Michigan, that await the attendees of the American Glass Guild 2010 Conference plus the results of the recent board elections for the Glass Art Society Conference. Completing this great set of articles is a discussion of the technical aspects and planning that are required for the installation of a large stained glass dome in the Latter-Day Saints Temple in Orlando, Florida, and a three-tiered, leaded-glass atrium chandelier for the cruise ship, Ruby Princess, created by Jancik Arts International.
You can find the rest of these articles in the Spring 2010 issue of Profitable Glass Quarterly.
Click here to discover more about how Dinah Ihle has found the perfect workspace in her 100-year-old, Craftsman–style house.
Spring 2010 Buy Now!
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