Beth Alongi Glass
SECONDS TINIES, 2+oz, COE 96 Murrini Millefiori
SECONDS TINIES, 2+oz, COE 96 Murrini Millefiori
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Big 2oz. mix of Tiny SECONDS! These are the seconds resulting from some of the designs of Tinies I had on 2/3/26. They are seconds because they are either prior or just past the best part of the pull. This means the designs will be not quite fully formed or starting to fade away. Photo is accurate on inner designs so you can see. I had more of some designs than others, so there will not be equal amounts of each design in the packages. I tried to make sure at least one of the designs shown in the listing photo will be in your package. There will be lots of seconds butterflies floating around. :)
About Tinies: They are perfect for micro-fusing, micro-mosaic art, filler in larger pieces and more! Even though they are tiny, they have still been annealed for those who will not be fusing with them. Tinies snip like a dream with wheeled nippers. If fusing with the tinies, I recommend snipping them on the thinner side (2mm). You can easily get twenty five 2mm chips from each cane. If using in micro-mosaic jewelry, then the size of the snipped pieces will be determined by the depth of your bezel. Sold in 1+oz. packages, which will be two canes of each of the 17 designs you see above.
Read more about the Tinies in my January 2, 2026 blog.
They were hand-pulled by me in my glass shop’s vitrigraph kiln, annealed and tested. See dime for size reference. They were photographed in the best lighting possible to show accurate colors (however all computer monitors render colors differently). I use only Oceanside fusible glass in my shop unless specified in the listing. COE 96.
This listing is for a BIG 2+oz. package! Once received, the cane can be snipped as thick or thin as you’d like. You can get approximately 14-16 3mm pieces from each cane or 25 or more 2mm slices. These canes are VERY easy to snip then with wheeled nippers
Murrini with an outer shape (leaf, heart, ripple petal, etc.,) will require a TACK FUSE to retain that shape during the fusing process.
Feel free to reach out to me anytime! I’m always happy to answer questions.
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