Description
The glassblowing tradition of Aleppo is one of the oldest continuously practiced crafts in the world — Aleppo’s position on ancient trade routes and its access to natron (natural soda) and silica sand established the city as a glassmaking centre from the 3rd millennium BCE. This documentary portrait was made in a family workshop in the old city’s craft quarter with the workshop owner’s agreement, the subject in the blowing phase of a vessel creation: the molten gather at 1200°C glows orange on the pipe, and the glassblower’s cheeks are inflated in the controlled breath-pressure application that shapes the bubble. The workshop background shows the batch of crushed recycled bottle glass waiting for the next melt cycle. Shot at 1/500 second on a 50mm prime at f/4 to capture both the glowing gather and the workshop context, the orange-white of the molten glass is the dominant light source in the image.
