Sans Soucie
Art Glass Studios, Inc.

Since 1976

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Archive for September, 2009

Chauncey featured in Decorative Glass Magazine

September 29th, 2009 by lgannett – Comments (0)

Cover Dec Glass MagazineOur very own President and principal artist, Chauncey Gannett was recently selected to be the featured artist inside Decorative Glass Magazine’s monthly “Creative Voice” feature.

Chauncey was asked a number of questions about the industry, how he got started working with glass and any areas of special interest he may have.  See the full page article on page 20 of the Aug/Sept/Oct digital edition!  You can also sign up for a free subscription!

Creative Voice CWG Sans Soucie

Click on the image above to download article!

Decorative Glass Magazine is a fairly new publication with its first print in August 2008.  Published by Key Communications, Inc., publisher of USGlass magazine, Decorative Glass magazine offers an in-depth look at some of the most influential topics for this industry, helping guide the design and installation communities toward increased use and specification of decorative glass products.

Architects, designers and glass companies of all kinds would find Decorative Glass magazine to be a great resource for the architectural glass  market.

This latest edition will be distributed at the upcoming GlassBuild America which starts tomorrow and continues thru October 2, at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta, Georgia.

We are very excited that Chauncey was selected for this feature and are anxious to see the responses we will get from this great exposure!

Portraitures: Artistic Impressions in Glass

September 25th, 2009 by lgannett – Comments (0)

etched glass portrait marilynOne of the most difficult and most intricate design styles we create at Sans Soucie Art Glass, are portraits in glass, or “portraitures”.  Just drawing a portrait is difficult enough, but etching and carving it into glass, being able to create just the right depth and shading effect in the glass, requires a gift of another level of artistic ability and then years of work and practice, honing that gift into a high level of skill.etched decorative glass window young girl clay pot stream

Over the years, we’ve been asked to create literally hundreds of different types of portraits, most of which are artistic interpretations of a character type, and not a specific individual.

Our most popular portraiture, no doubt, is our woman featured in waterfall scenes, that we years ago named “Ecstasy“.  She has been featured on shower enclosures and dividers, frameless doors as well as mirror.

From cowboys to Geisha girls, golfers to mermaids, as with any other design style we create, there’s literally no limit to the different type of characters that can be designed and etched and carved into the glass.

etched carved glass woman in waterfall lakeBack in the 80’s with the popularity of southwest designs, we did a large number of various indian maiden and warrior characters.  Color was very often incorporated into those designs to really bring out a southwest feel.   A number of different types of “pantry chef’s” is another popular portaiture design.

I would have to say that one of my personal favorites from over the years was a double entry door glass commissioned by Johnson & Johnson, for the Centector Medical Research laboratory in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  centecor medical research molecule etched in glassUnfortunatley the photo we have of the installed glass is low resolution, so the rich, deep carved details are hardly visible, but at least the design comes across.   The detail on this design was just incredible.  The design featured six different sections, all portraying something scientific and relating to to medical research, fitting for a laboratory entry way!  There’s a face of a surgeon with a molucule, a doctor holding a chemical vile, a pair of hands holding open a medical reference book,  another different molecule or cell, and a section with a doctor and nurse conversing.  This glass will always be one of my favorite pieces.

A Stunning Combination: Etched and Beveled Glass

September 22nd, 2009 by lgannett – Comments (0)

We recently installed one of the most stunning, most unique entry glass systems we’ve ever designed and created.   Commissioned by the homeowner, the glass was installed inside their private residence inside The Vintage Club of Indian Wells, California.  This gorgeous luxury home is currently undergoing a complete renovation and remodel by De Witte Construction of Palm Desert.

"Grand Entry"  View from inside the home.

"Grand Entry" View from inside the home.

We featured additional art glass windows created for this home in a previous blog .. elegant windows of landscape and floral designs, featuring our highest levels of design quality and complexity levels.stained glass beveled etched tropical leaves1

The glass for the entry is unique in that it features both a tropical etched glass design that was applied to leaded beveled glass .. a rare and stunning combination.

The entry system has a total of seven triple pane, insulated glass units installed into metal frames (provided by Crystal Clear Mirror & Glass of Thousand  Palms).  The glass used to create the leaded panels, consists of tall vertical rectangles and squares with beveled edges all around, that run across both the top and bottom sections, combined with panes of clear glass across the remainder of the glass, called “the field” areas.  The center sections of the door glass features a “diamond shape” with various types of beautiful textured glass, adding another level of variation and interest to the design.

The leaded panels were then sandblasted with an etched and shaded Tropical Leaf design, with tall leaves that run up the sides and angle in toward the center, creating an “inviting” feel as you approach the entry.

View from the outside as you approach the home.

View from the outside as you approach the home.

We are extremely proud to have been selected to create this stunning entry, as well as the additional art glass windows for this incredible home and working with this homeowner, the staff of De Witte Construction and Crystal Clear Mirror & Glass was a pleasure as always!   What a great project.

door/window/stained glass/beveled tropical leaves - 2

Shower in Illuminated Art: Custom shower enclosures

September 17th, 2009 by lgannett – Comments (0)

Over the last 33 years, Sans Soucie has created incredible custom designed etched and carved glass frameless shower doors and shower enclosures inside hundreds of luxury, custom homes.

"Arctic" shower enclosure, features heavy glass overlay pieces, chiseled edges and a stunning random texture.  The shower is being illuminated by the window on the opposite wall.  Commissioned by Susan Schreiber Interior Designs.

"Arctic" shower enclosure, features heavy glass overlay pieces, chiseled edges and a stunning random texture. The shower is being illuminated by the window on the opposite wall. Commissioned by Susan Schreiber Interior Designs.

Our etched and carved glass designs on shower glass instantly turn an ordinary, plain glass shower enclosure into an illuminated work of art that you will enjoy not only each time you step into the shower, but every time you enter your bathroom!

"Rugged Retreat" gives the illusion of multi-layers with waves crossing over one another.  Note the "matching mirror" inside the shower, the edges are chiseled and waves are etched and 3-dimenssionally sculpture carved.

"Rugged Retreat" gives the illusion of multi-layers with waves crossing over one another. Note the "matching mirror" inside the shower, the edges are chiseled and waves are etched and 3-dimenssionally sculpture carved.

As with all our products, the design possibilities are limitless and so are the applications.  One design option is to merely “trim”  or “frame” your shower glass.   Adding a beautiful etched and/or carved and painted border, for example, adds a beautiful custom touch.   We can also target certain areas of your shower glass where you may want to create privacy or obscurity, such as the center sections, or lower section, running up into the center, while leaving the top area clear, allows for visibility in to the shower (allowing you to admire your tile work), which at the same will allow you to “see out” from inside the shower, creating a completely open feel as you stand in your shower.

"Cyclone" shower door with narrow side panel.  Center section is 3-dimensionally carved and painted, side waves are carved and shaded.

"Cyclone" shower door with narrow side panel. Center section is 3-dimensionally carved and painted, side waves are carved and shaded.

Adding one of our custom edges to the exposed, top edges of the glass is a fantastic application as well.  Sans Soucie creates a large number of custom edge designs, ranging from a simple chiseled edge, to waves and various textures.

"Expanding Bands", a simple design targeting the center sections, for an added touch and a bit of obscurity.

"Expanding Bands", a simple design targeting the center sections, for an added touch and a bit of obscurity.

Visit our Custom Shower Enclosure gallery to see dozens of sample showers of all shapes, sizes and configurations.  We also create free standing dividers for showers and baths.

First Impressions Count: Stunning entries that make a statement!

September 15th, 2009 by lgannett – Comments (0)

"Bamboo Forest" Frameless, all glass entry doors.  Carved & painted with a solid frosted background for privacy.

"Bamboo Forest" Frameless, all glass entry doors. Carved & painted with a solid frosted background for privacy.

Without question, our most popular product is our Custom Door Glass Inserts and Frameless, all glass entry systems.   This makes sense for a number of reasons.  First and foremost is the fact that the entryway into any home or business is a major focal point that everyone see’s, time and time again as we come and go, so the look and feel presented on our front door glass really makes a statement as to the decor and design flow for the rest of the home, not only coordinating with and complimenting the architecture when viewed from the outside, but the interior decor when viewed from the inside.  Our clients want a highly personalized, custom look that sets the tone as you enter their home.

This is also is an area where a lot of light is desired, but privacy is usually needed, at least to some degree.  Custom glass is the perfect solution for this.  Any design can be executed to the privacy level needed, which gives a lot of room to customize and make the design “fit” the  need.   When viewing our glass, it’s always “all about the light!”  At different times of the day, as light and shadow shift, the glass will actually take on different looks and effects.

"Jagged Peaks" Frameless Entry Doors when viewed from the inside in the daytime.

"Jagged Peaks" Frameless Entry Doors when viewed from the inside in the daytime.

During the day, the natural light from outside illuminates the glass and adds a very dramatic effect to the entry when viewed from the inside.  At night, the opposite will take place.  The interior lighting will illuminate the glass, highlighting every detail in the design, creating a bright, stunning, dramatic effect as you approach the home from the outside.  No doubt this is why we create more door glass than any other item type in our wide variety of residential and commercial glass products.

"Jagged Peaks" Frameless Entry (BRONZE glass), viewed from the OUTSIDE in the daytime.

"Jagged Peaks" Frameless Entry (BRONZE glass), viewed from the OUTSIDE in the daytime.

Elegant Windows installed at The Vintage Club

September 11th, 2009 by lgannett – Comments (0)

Just this week, we installed three magnificent windows featuring truly graceful, elegant designs.

The hardest part about featuring them in our blog, is the fact that the photos can’t possibly demonstrate their beauty!   Partly because photographing our work is always challenging, with reflection and light always being an issue, but also because the method of sandblasting used to execute these particular pieces.

Close up of "Floral Perch"

Close up of "Floral Perch"

These windows needed to provide 100% privacy.  In order to achieve that, the entire glass surface must be either “frosted” and/or carved, obviously laving no clear glass.  In this case, the design elements were 3-dimensionally sculpture carved,  leaving no clear areas, featuring no “shading” within the design.   The design is illuminated beautifully by the natural sunlight coming through the glass, and the sculpture carved edges and angles in the design become a bright white.

Full view of "Floral Perch" 32" x 93" Window

Full view of "Floral Perch" 32" x 93" Window

The other thing you can’t appreciate without seeing these windows installed in person, is their SIZE!    “Floral Perch” is 32″ wide x 93″ tall and “Swan Lake” is 94″ wide x 72″ tall.  All are dual pane, insulated tempered glass units.  Incidentally, these windows represent a very good example of what is considered one of our highest complexity, most intricate design styles.   (Visit our “Techniques & Effects” page on our site to learn more about design complexity levels).  It took many hours of carving, by extremely skilled hands to achieve the varying depths and perfect textures, fitting for each different design element:  from swan feathers, tree bushels, various flowers, tiny leaves and streams of water, each surface has distinguishable differences in their carved textures.

These windows were just installed last week, at a private residence inside The Vintage Club, Indian Wells, California, as part of an extensive remodel being done by De Witte Construction, Palm Desert. And because I can’t wait to share, I’ll also tell you that coming soon, we are installing all new entry glass into this incredible home, that I can say with confidence, will be one the grandest, most stunning entries we’ve ever created and installed.  Considering the many breathtaking entries we’ve completed in the past, I know that’s saying a lot, but once you get a look at it, we think you’ll agree that it’s one of our most beautiful.  (Just a teaser:  it incorporates both beveled leaded glass with an etched and shaded design combined!)etched glass window swans lake trees landscape

"Tranquil Meadows" 60" x 108" Window

"Tranquil Meadows" 60" x 108" Window

A little history: Sans Soucie’s beginnings

September 9th, 2009 by lgannett – Comments (0)

vintage ss5

2 of 4 Tiffany windows reconstructed

After writing the last blog about stained glass, I got to thinking about some of the beautiful, original work done by Sans Soucie and its beginnings, which prompted me to ask Chauncey’s Mother, Bonnie, to share a little bit about the history of Sans Soucie, how things got started and if there were any particular projects or pieces that stood out in her mind as she reflected on the “early days”.

“The original start-up business  was called ‘Classical Glass’ and started  in our garage, in Newport Beach, in 1974.  Sans Soucie Studio began work in the hi-desert of California, in Pioneer Town, 1976.  Moving from a barn on Pipes Canyon Road to a glass front shop on the 29 Palms Highway that many locals will remember because of the big white “tipi” that sat in the front parking lot.  The County offices never could find a restriction to cover that placement and so the tipi remained until some member of the Agua Caliente Tribe purchased our tipi.  Of course they didn’t know how to put it up.  The Cahuilla never used tipis.

vintage ss3

Commissioned by "Save the Whales" Foundation, Long Beach, CA

Yes, the only focus in the beginning was classic leaded glass panels and lamp shades of various beveled, hand blown antique glass and Tiffany opalescent, still made by the same factories that Tiffany commissioned. (Stained being something entirely different that we only came close to duplicating with air brushing some years later).

For neophytes, the very first project, in 1974,  was one of the finest, most intricate and complex that we ever did.   A huge dream commission that consisted of two entry side lites measuring,  approximately  4′ x 8′  on each side of massive wood entry doors. It was an intricate floral design of vines, leaves and beautifully shaded opalescent flowers.  I went absolutely crazy at Hollander Glass in Long Beach, selecting the glass.  The windows were so heavy that they had to be braced with steel rods, heated and bent to conform to the vine pattern, braced across the panels.  Doubt that we made any money on the job but it was a  wonderful first learning experience.  vintage ss7

Several other jobs come to memory from either sheer size or sheer prestige.

In 1975, while visiting for a wedding in Canada, we were commissioned to do an entire kitchen ceiling.  The pattern and colors mimicked the hand painted floor tiles in rich tones of gold and purple.

Vintage SS Houstin Jul 81

Room Divider for Rusty Pelican Restaurant, Houston TX

For Jack Knox, (< see page 10 of pdf download)  (Jack was always incredibly good, not only at providing work for us, but allowing us free creative expression), we created a round master bedroom window/headboard of Peacocks and Peonies, installed in the front exterior wall of the home.

The very ultimate was a custom beveled entry for the Rusty Pelican Restaurant, Newport Beach, a design of huge flying Pelicans commissioned by the RayGal Design firm that I designed.

Chad (who still assembles the majority of our stained glass pieces today), leaded both of those projects in the 80’s.   He also re-constructed a 4′ x 8′ Tiffany commissioned piece, taken from a home in Pasadena, California.

vintage ss6

“Stained glass” took root in Cathedral windows after the middle ages.  As I recall the history, the formulas for making richly colored blown glass was lost during that time we know as the dark ages. The antique glass could only be mimicked by hand painting clear glass with colors that were then fired to “stain” the glass.  There are still a few old glass houses around the world that specialize in “stained” glass.  We visited one such work shop in Paris that had been in multi-generation operation.  Both here in the US, and in Canada, there are a limited number of companies that specialize in the repair and reconstruction of old stained glass windows. Clients have to wait years for work.  The unique beauty of a  “Chartres Cathedral” is the jewel like gleaming of the original “antique glass” made with ancient formulas of lead and arsenic, but the glass is hand cut and hand leaded using the same process that we use today.”

Stained Glass: Beauty that endures

September 3rd, 2009 by lgannett – Comments (0)

"Beautiful Bevel Clusters" door glass installed at a private residence at Rancho La Quinta Country Club, La Quinta, California

"Beautiful Bevel Clusters" door glass installed at a private residence at Rancho La Quinta Country Club, La Quinta, California

When Sans Soucie first began in 1976, the original primary medium was stained glass. Creating custom partitions and lamp shades for various establishments such as Rusty Pelican restaurants, stained glass was back then and remains today to be very popular and beautiful choice for many product applications and types of projects.

Windows and door glass are of course the most popular products, but another would be custom cabinet glass.  As with our etched glass designs, any design is possible and of course there are thousands of glass colors and almost limitless textures that can be implemented.

"Magnolias & Hummingbirds" custom cabinet glass.

"Magnolias & Hummingbirds" custom cabinet glass.

Beveled glass remains one of the most beautiful looks and effects for stained and leaded glass pieces.  Much like diamonds, that beautiful faceted, prism effect will never go out of style and are used inside both traditional or contemporary designs.

When leaded or stained glass panels are used for an exterior application (for a window or door), most often, the decorative panel is sealed in between two layers of glass, a “triple pane” unit, providing ultimate protection from the elements outside as well as easy cleaning and maintenance.

"Arabesque Bevels" tub windows, private residence The Hideaway, La Quinita, California

"Arabesque Bevels" tub windows, private residence The Hideaway, La Quinita, California

Visit our Stained Glass Gallery to view dozens of stunning  pieces created over the years.

"Z Bevels"  A contemporary, leaded glass design.

"Z Bevels" A contemporary, leaded glass design.

Bank of America Glass featured in Glass Magazine

September 1st, 2009 by lgannett – Comments (0)

The industry publication Glass Magazine, featured an article about the glass we did for The Bank of America Tower at One Bryant Park, New York.

The tree bark texture glass is suspended as a large "cube" of ceiling glass, inside the main lobby entrance.

The tree bark texture glass is suspended as a large "cube" of ceiling glass, inside the main lobby entrance.

The article was released earlier this year, but is continually posted on their web site, inside their “Photo Gallery:  Green Great Glazings” section.   The project was the first featured in the section, and is listed among many other notable “green” projects or buildings such as the University of Colorado’s Research Complex, (which won the Project of the Year award for more than $3 million projects from the Colorado Glazing Contractors Association.  Also featured is an article about special Nano-coating used on glass at California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, California.

Glass Magazine serves the architectural, retail and automotive glass industries and is published monthly.  We have been receiving the magazine for a number of years and find it to be a very informative resource for product guides, industry profiles, industry stats and informative coverage.

Tree Bark Texture of the glass at Bank of America Tower, One Bryant Park, New York

Tree Bark Texture of the glass at Bank of America Tower, One Bryant Park, New York

See more photos and a short video presentation that tells the whole story about the glass at One Bryant Park inside the Featured Projects section of our web site!