Newsletter – Autumn 2025

Dear all,

It’s been a little while since you last heard from me, but I haven’t been standing still! Over the past months I’ve been traveling in Germany, blowing glass for my upcoming artist residency, expanding my product line, and much more that I’d love to share with you.

Art in church

This spring I worked on an artwork for Cafékirken in Copenhagen, a wonderful project where I gave new life and meaning to an old stained-glass window. You can read more about the project through this link.

New skills

Thanks to a generous grant from the Alexander Tutsek Foundation, I was able to take part in a course at Bildwerk Frauenau in Germany. I had an amazing and inspiring time there, together with others who share the same passion for glass. I was part of a diverse group of ten participants from across Europe, ranging from beginners to experienced glassblowers.

I joined the course at Bildwerk taught by glass artist Clare Belfrage, whose way of working is with great attention to patterns, depth, and form, was very inspiring. What made the experience even more valuable was that I could experiment without pressure. Renting a furnace to blow glass is expensive, and failed experiments often feel like wasted money. But here, I had the freedom to explore and play, and that was lots of fun!

Although the focus wasn’t on creating finished pieces, I still made some works that I am proud of. During my upcoming artist residency in October at The Fat Eye Art Gallery, located on a small island in Denmark, I plan to further develop these pieces by combining them with stone. I will share more about the results later!

New direction

In the meantime, many new ideas are bubbling up around how to run my business, you may recognize that feeling. In the coming period, I’ll be focusing on splitting my practice into two directions:

My goal is to turn these into two separate businesses. Quite a change! After months of brainstorming, I’ve finally chosen the names… but I’ll keep that a little secret for now, until things are more concrete. I think that will be more fun 😉

Thank you so much for reading along again. It means a lot to me to share my glass adventures with you!

Do you have something precious you want to repurpose and wonder if it’s possible to do something with glass, like the stained glass from the Cafekirke? Let’s have a chat! Feel free to contact me.