The vibration starts in the wrist, a low-frequency hum that travels through the diamond-tipped cutter and into the marrow of my forearm. It’s a 15-degree tilt, no more, no less. If I slip, the 15th-century cobalt glass doesn’t just break; it screams. It’s a sound I’ve heard 25 times in my career, and every time, it feels like a personal failure of the soul. But today, my hands are steady. I just removed a stubborn splinter from my thumb-a tiny, jagged shard of 17th-century oak from a frame-and the absence of that nagging sting has left me with a strange, hyper-focused clarity. The skin is still red where the tweezers bit in, a small price for the relief of being whole again, or at least as whole as a person can be in a workshop filled with dust and lead.
The Nature of True Repair
People think restoration is about making things look new. They come into my studio with their heirloom lamps or church panels, their eyes pleading for the erasure of time. They want the cracks to vanish. They want the 45 years of neglect or the accidental 55-mph gust of wind that blew the window in to be nothing more than a bad memory. But they’re wrong. They are fundamentally, catastrophically wrong about what beauty is.
The Lie vs. The Lead
True restoration isn’t about hiding the break; it’s about the lead. It’s about the heavy, dull grey lines that bind the shattered pieces back into a singular narrative. If you try to glue glass back together invisibly, you’re just creating a fragile lie that will yellow and fail within 15 years. But if you lead it? If you accept the break and bridge it with something strong? That’s where the art begins.
Soot and Manganese
I’m currently staring down 255 individual pieces of a rose window. The center is a deep, bruised violet that you can’t buy anymore. They used manganese back then in quantities that would probably get a modern factory shut down in 15 minutes. The light hitting the bench right now is filtered through 75 years of industrial soot that I haven’t scrubbed off yet. It’s thick, almost oily.
My mentor used to say that you don’t really see glass until you see the dirt on it. The dirt gives the light something to fight against. Without the struggle, light is just radiation; with the struggle, it’s a story. I’ve spent the last 15 days just cleaning the edges of these shards. It’s tedious, bone-dry work that makes my lungs feel like they’re lined with sandpaper, despite the $105 respirator I wear.
“We are so obsessed with perfection that we’ve forgotten how to value resilience. We want the 1925 luster without the 1925 history.”
– The Conservator
I’m often accused of being cynical because I refuse to use modern epoxies to ‘heal’ a clean break. A client once offered me an extra $525 to make a crack in a Tiffany-style shade disappear. I told him to take his money and buy a plastic lamp from a big-box store. He didn’t understand that the crack was the most interesting thing about the piece. It was the moment the object met reality and survived. We see it in the way people treat their own lives, too-sanding down their edges, trying to fill their gaps with something transparent so no one knows they ever fell apart.
B
[The break is the beginning of the bond.]