Transparent single color sheet glass, with smooth or textured surfaces.
Transparent Glass, generally in a single color. Named for the original 'tinted glass' first used in 10th century European cathedrals. Contrast to opalescent glass.
Richly colored, transparent glass, used to create stained glass pieces.
Translucent glass used in the manufacture of stained and leaded glass windows.
Is usually a transparent glass of one color. Various patterns may be rolled onto the glass during its manufacture to diffuse light coming through the glass. Common patterns include hammered, granite, ripple, seedy, double rolled, and rough rolled.
An inexpensive, commercial machine-rolled colored glass available in various textures but with very limited colors.
Machine—made, transparent stained glass. Uniform in thickness; about 3mm
Glass which is composed of the same ingredients as antique glass, but rolled or formed in a machine to a uniform texture.
Cathedral glass is the name given commercially to monochromatic sheet glass, which is thin by comparison with slab glass, may be coloured and is textured on one side.