About Lynn Shilp & Breagha Glass

About Lynn Shilp…

Following on from a career in nursing, specialising in Intensive Care, within the NHS & also overseas, travels saw summers spent in the Channel & Greek islands in contrast to winters in the Canadian Rockies & French Alps ski instructing.
 
Always with a lifelong interest & dabbling in traditional crafts from spinning & weaving to pioneer patchwork & quilting & finally glass leading & copper-foiling courses in Australia, return to Edinburgh led to further studies & qualifications at College & Art School.

Developing Breagha Glass…

Breagha Glass began as a hobby, developed into a passion & naturally a small business evolved.

The transition part of a bigger ambitious lifestyle change with retirement, the catalyst & influenced by a creative desire to change tack.

Eventually settling in Highland Perthshire & finally fulfilling the dream, this culminated in the launch of Breagha Glass in 2014. An exciting & successful venture from Lynn’s glass art studio in Keltneyburn.

A short history of glass…

The earliest glass objects, mainly jewellery, have been found in Egypt & date back to 3500 BC.   Later the Romans did much to spread the technique of glass production when they invaded Europe.   Then, during the Middle Ages craftsmen produced magnificent stained glass windows for churches & cathedrals, many fine examples still seen today.

The 20th Century saw the “Arts & Crafts Movement” evolve with the legendary Charles Rennie McIntosh ( a Scot) & Louis Comfort Tiffany (an American) bring glass & design to a new & exciting artistic level.

Glass is created by the fusion of sand & fire & by adding minerals & salts the vibrant colours & patterns are produced with natural light transforming the glass. 

From the mid 1970’s specialist glass for art & architecture began manufacture in the  USA where skilled craftspeople pour, roll & shape the moulten glass into sheets providing a wide choice of products in a sophisticated colour palette.

Breagha Glass Process…

Design begins with an idea, then onto a sketch.

Progressing onto measuring, cutting, layering & stacking the glass to a design specification.

This is then placed in the electric powered & computer controlled kiln.

A series of rapid heat cycles, with preset temperatures around 1490 F (810 C) are held, at predetermined intervals to allow bonding, & finally, a process of slow cooling is essential to complete the fused glass artwork process.

Contact Breagha Glass

If you would like to purchase glass direct from Lynn

© 2025 Breagha Glass.  |   Responsive website embgraphics.co.uk

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