Improving West Virginia Corrections, Conserving Salamanders And Accessing Dental Care, This West Virginia Week

This week on West Virginia Week we learn about improvements being made to the state’s correctional facilities. Also we learn about the issues of protecting endangered Appalachian salamanders.

This week on West Virginia Week we learn about improvements being made to the state’s correctional facilities. Also we learn about the issues of protecting endangered Appalachian salamanders.

We’ll also hear about barriers to dental care for West Virginians with disabilities.

And join us for a look at a century old glassblowing operation in the state.

Chris Schulz is our host this week. Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert.

West Virginia Week is a web-only podcast that explores the week’s biggest news in the Mountain State. It’s produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Caroline MacGregor, Chris Schulz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Liz McCormick, and Randy Yohe. Learn more about West Virginia Week.

Inside Appalachia: From Sand To Hand With Blenko Glass’ Wood Mold Maker

In a workshop with so many vital pairs of hands, one pair touches most everything in the shop: the shop’s wood mold maker, Daniel Chapman.

In an era of speed, algorithms, and increasing automation, Blenko Glass holds true to its ethos: handmade “from sand to hand.”

Blenko Glass’ creative director, James Arnett, describes the process as an art. 

“Blenko is unique in being handmade, but especially unique still being handmade in 2023,” he said.

He said the process includes the careful steps of workers in the shop’s dance of molten glass, heat and classic wooden molds.

“(The) glassblowing process is magical, it’s alchemical, it’s intense to watch, right, there are seven moving bodies per shop, each one doing a different task that makes the glass from sand to hand, as we call it,” Arnett said.

In a workshop with so many vital pairs of hands, one pair touches most everything in the shop: the shop’s wood mold maker, Daniel Chapman.

“But the reason that Daniel Chapman is so important, right, is that he is, he’s the man where the rubber hits the road, right? So it goes from paper, but it has to go into a mold, right? And that’s a cornerstone of our glassblowing process,” Arnett said.

Like most workers at Blenko Glass, Chapman just needed a job when he was hired on at 18 years old.

“Nobody came to glass for glass,” Arnett said. “Not here. We all came from other corners of the world, or just because we needed a job. And we had the sort of thrill and privilege of being able to come into this environment and pick up a trade, a craft and an art.”

Chapman worked with his mentor, Robert Smith for about five years before taking over the woodshop.

“It starts off with a pattern, like you can see down the wall behind you here,” Chapman said. “That is stuff we have made down through the years. To start something new, a customer might send in a piece of glass and say, ‘I want this duplicated.’ So I sketch the whole thing out and make a mold that fits their piece of glass. Sometimes somebody comes up with a new idea, sometimes I come up with ideas on my own. You draw it out on paper first, it is cardboard paper, so you cut that out. I go outside and get the piece of wood I’ll need, cut it and just start carving.”

Daniel Chapman holds up a paper outline of the wood mold carved in the background.

Emily Rice/WVPB

“I’ll pull up at 7:30, a little earlier than normal,” Arnett said. “I’ll see Daniel Chapman standing in the parking lot with the chainsaw have enough to cherry wood trees that we’ve drug into the backlog back there. He’s already got an idea in his head of how big that piece is gonna have to be. And so he takes that chainsaw to that tree and cuts off that that first bit of it right it looks just like a stump.”

Arnett said each mold is a benchmark by which to form the pieces. All pieces start as a blob of molten glass which is attached to a long hollow metal pole. A blower blows into the pole, creating a pocket of air in the blob of molten glass.

“So the thing about the way that wooden molds work is that when the blower inflates the glass within the cherry wood mold, which has been soaking and is wet, it creates a pocket of steam on the inside of the form of that mold that the glass rides, right,” Arnett said. “So as the blower spins that pipe with that hot, unformed mass with the air behind it in that mold, it creates a pocket where the glass doesn’t even really touch the edge of the wood. And it creates a sort of a negative space around it that allows it to take its form, our wood molds would burn out really fast if we didn’t have that sort of centripetal technology behind our blowing.”

Chapman not only conceives of and creates wooden molds but keeps everyone’s tools in working order.

“It’s really neat to watch Daniel Chapman interact with our shop floor on a daily basis,” Arnett said. “He will come up to watch to make sure that our new molds are being blown in well, accurately, responsibly. He’ll take a look at the health of our molds. He’ll take a look at the health of our tools to make sure that they’re still effective, they’re still clean, they still work to the purpose that they were cut to. His cumulative wisdom about how glass is blown from the side of working wood really informs the way that we do everything on our hot shop floor.”

Daniel Chapman has made the wooden molds that Blenko Glass makes for its handmade glassware.

Emily Rice/WVPB

Blenko Glass uses its wooden molds differently from other studios, allowing them to soak for years so they can be used over and over again.

“So it’s a legacy he’s making not just sort of the form in which the glass goes but he’s making an artifact every single time that has a long life in our hands,” Arnett said. “It reminds us to that nothing here it goes to waste. Everything that we make that we use, has multiple purposes as cross purposes has been reclaimed, refashion and reformed or refurbished in some way.”

Chapman takes a two-dimensional drawing and creates an outline of the piece with cardboard and uses those dimensions to carve out the negative space for the piece.

“You stack the pieces up, of course this one is warped where it has dried out,” Chapman said. “But you stack the two pieces up, and find your center, follow that center line all the way through and then these two, the tab right there goes center to center and you draw both pieces, and you start carving and you carve until it is done.”

Ever the humble craftsman, Chapman is sure to let Arnett know he works with dimensions on the patterns lining the walls.

All of these patterns got the dimension on there, the size of the piece it takes to make it,” Chapman said.

Chapman said he enjoys the hard work he has put into the shop each day for almost 40 years.

“I’ve always enjoyed what I do, it is hard work but I worked other jobs here before I came to the mould shop,” Chapman said. “I worked the flattener, made sheet stained glass windows. They don’t do that anymore because the demand left us. I worked the flattener for a few years, I drove trucks for a little while. I started here about 35 years ago making molds and I’ve been doing it ever since.”

Chapman also said that the modernization of his craft, even the addition of metal molds instead of wood, would take away from Blenko’s credibility as handmade.

“It gives it more character for one thing, metal molds we gotta do a process to them, we gotta paste them, bake them in the oven, pour sawdust inside, to actually give it a wooden surface on the inside,” Chapman said. “And a wood mold used will burn out, it will eventually burn out and you’ll have to make another one.”

Scrap pieces of wood await Blenko Glass’ next project for a mold.

Emily Rice/WVPB

While the wooden mold may burn out, Chapman said he can create a new one from scratch within days.

“Metal molds, one thing it is very expensive getting them cast and machined and you gotta wait two or three months to get the process done, and a wood mold, two days and I can have you a new mold,” Chapman said.

While Chapman touches most everything in Blenko Glass, his actual wood molds are available for sale as well.

“I take some of them, sand them down and get all the black off of them, get them real pretty and varnish them and we send them down to the visitor’s center,” Chapman said.

A cleaned, varnished and finished Daniel Chapman wood mold is shown in Blenko Glass’ gift shop.

Emily Rice/WVPB

“Down into our visitor center on any given day, and there’s a half of a molds down there, that Daniel Chapman has handcut,” Arnett said. “And then also hand polished, and hand veneered and varnished and brought down there and cured. We keep them up here for a while to make sure that they’re nice and clean and beautiful. And it comes out in this really, richly patina wood, because it shows the evidence of its use, but it shows every bit of the evidence of its making to not just as a usable object, but then also as a decor object, right? So thinking of putting it on display next to the piece that you have completed from that mould, is a really cool thing.”

“Well, I don’t know, it kind of swells your head a little bit sometimes but I try not to, I’m just me, ain’t nothing special about me,” Chapman said.

Chapman is a cornerstone of the Blenko Glass factory and the through line through which all glass moves, from sand to hand.

Glassblowing Traditions And Protecting An Endangered Salamander, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, Blenko Glass has been making everything from stem and table ware to decorative glass figurines for more than a century and proposed federal protections for the spring salamander.

On this West Virginia Morning, Emily Rice toured the Blenko Factory in Milton where Blenko Glass has been making everything from stem and table ware to decorative glass figurines through traditional, hand-carved cherry wood molds for more than a century.

Also, Curtis Tate spoke with a senior scientist at the Center for Biological Diversity about the spring salamander and proposed federal protections.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Glassmaking Apprenticeship Open For SNAP Recipients

On-the-job training and apprenticeship opportunities are available at Blenko Glass in Milton, West Virginia through the Bureau for Family Assistance.

On-the-job training and apprenticeship opportunities are available at Blenko Glass in Milton, West Virginia through the Bureau for Family Assistance. 

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Employment & Training participants are eligible to apply. 

Blenko Glass Company is a 128-year-old family business specializing in artisanal hand-blown glass. This partnership allows program participants to train as apprentices, earn the equivalent of an associate degree and receive skill-based pay increases. 

“The Bureau for Family Assistance is excited to partner with the one and only Blenko Glass Company to promote unique training and employment opportunities for our clients,” said Janie Cole, commissioner of DHHR’s Bureau for Family Assistance. “We are eager to expand our reach through new partnerships and help put more SNAP clients into high-demand, well-paying jobs so that they may make meaningful changes in their lives and the lives of their families. The chance to do that with a West Virginia icon like Blenko just makes it that much better.”

This partnership allows program participants to train as apprentices, earn the equivalent of an associate degree, and receive skill-based pay increases.  

Blenko recently partnered with the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Apprenticeship and the West Virginia Department of Economic Development to build and implement West Virginia’s first registered Glass Worker Apprenticeship. The apprenticeship consists of a blend of on-the-job training by Blenko Glass Company’s master craftsmen, in addition to classroom instruction from a veteran glass artist. 

Blenko Glass Company’s learn-and-earn model apprenticeship is an industry-driven career pathway where the company develops its future workforce, and participants obtain paid work experience, classroom instruction and a nationally recognized portable certificate.

“Through this partnership with the SNAP E&T program, we hope to deepen our connections with West Virginians and make a difference in our communities while continuing to preserve our state’s glassmaking history,” said Blenko Glass President John W. Blenko, M.D. “It is our goal to provide program participants with the education, training and support they need to become self-sufficient members of our workforce.” 

Individuals currently enrolled or potentially eligible for SNAP benefits who are interested in paid placement at Blenko Glass Company should contact their local county DHHR office and ask to be referred to SNAP E&T.  

Individuals and families may apply for SNAP benefits at www.wvpath.wv.gov or at their local DHHR office. To find a DHHR office near you, visit https://dhhr.wv.gov/pages/field-offices.aspx.

Celebrating Outstanding Educators: Christie Meadows Wins Above And Beyond Award From WVPB

Christie Meadows, a fifth grade teacher at Glenwood School, Mercer County has earned West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Above and Beyond Award for May, which recognizes excellence and creativity of Mountain State teachers.

Christie Meadows, a fifth grade teacher at Glenwood School, Mercer County has earned West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Above and Beyond Award for May, which recognizes excellence and creativity of Mountain State teachers.

Meadows was presented the award by WVPB’s Education Specialist Autumn Meadows. Christie Meadows received a monetary award and a signature Blenko Glass blue apple paperweight. The award is sponsored by the West Virginia State Treasurer’s Office, presenter of the SMART529 college savings program in the Mountain State.

Meadows has been a full-time teacher for 20 years and an educator for 26. She knew since she was a child playing school at home that she wanted to be a teacher. Her dedication to the profession and her students shows both in the classroom and in the community.

In the classroom, Meadows makes an effort to involve parents. Throughout the year she will bring them into the classroom to do things like crafts and in the past, she would do a career day for parents to volunteer to come in and present. Meadows said it’s important to include parents so that they can see what their child is experiencing at school and for the students to see their parents involved.

Meadows also goes above and beyond with classroom projects that engage the students but also reinforce skills taught and learned. Students would complete scavenger hunts, create PowerPoints, and participate in different experiments that involved melting holiday candies. In years past, they also wrote books as a class that were published for the students. This year, they had the opportunity to have pen pals in California and after a yearlong correspondence they got to virtually meet over ZOOM.

Meadows’ dedication reaches outside the classroom by showing the students the impact they can have in their community. They’ve collected and made stockings for local nursing homes, collected food and items for animal shelters, made cards for veterans, and this year they also fixed a meal for Amy’s House of Hope which provides meals to unhoused people in the community.

Meadows also practiced inclusivity by making sure her class did fun activities with students with disabilities not in the general education classrooms, such as bingo, Easter egg hunts, crafts and snacks. She said all these activities are her favorites. Meadows said, “I want them to see that not everyone has what they do and teaches them to put others before themselves. The kids look forward to these activities and truly enjoy helping others. They ask, ‘What else can we do?’”

“I love teaching,” said Meadows, “I love when you see a student who struggles begin to understand a concept. I love when they are willing to do things for others and not just themselves. I love watching students grow not just academically but socially and personally as well.”

Each month, WVPB has an esteemed panel of judges that select one deserving teacher who goes above and beyond for the students in West Virginia. If you know of a deserving teacher that goes “Above and Beyond,” please click here to nominate them.

As part of the Above and Beyond program, WVPB and the West Virginia State Treasurer’s Office will be hosting a Jurassic Jamboree at Marion County Public Library this Saturday, Aug. 5 with free goodies and a meet and greet with Buddy from the PBS KIDS show Dinosaur Train.

Blenko’s Glass Festival Returns

Blenko Glass Company founded the Festival of Glass at the turn of the 21st century to celebrate and preserve the heritage of glassmaking in Appalachia. 

On any particular day at Blenko Glass Company in Milton, West Virginia, the furnaces blaze with innovation as artists mold their glass creations into shapes that become iconic pieces of West Virginia history.

Charles Chafin has worked at Blenko for nearly three decades. He is passionate about his work and passes that gift along to his trainees.

“I’m having the best time in my life teaching the young ones all about Blenko glass, and they’re moving up quicker and I’m really loving that,” Chafin said.

A worker’s tools lay cooling after use in the fiery furnace.

Credit: Emily Rice/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Blenko Glass Company’s Festival of Glass will make its return this year on Aug. 5, and Chafin is excited for the return of the event. He said he enjoys meeting visitors from out-of-state.

“We are getting ready for our festival and it’ll be a great one,” Chaffin said. “We’ve been missing it for two or three years over this COVID. And now we start back, and I can’t wait to meet all the people. They come from all over the United States, they do. We had some three years ago, they were from Hawaii, California, Wyoming, Maine and we had Maryland, Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia. I hope we have a lot more out-of-state people come to see this. It is pretty cool.”

Blenko Glass Company founded the Festival of Glass at the turn of the 21st century to celebrate and preserve the heritage of glassmaking in Appalachia. 

The company is a cultural icon of the Mountain State with roots that run deep through its passionate employees.

James Arnett, creative director of Blenko Glass, said the Festival of Glass is a chance for visitors to have an immersive experience in the workshop.

“We have run this festival of glass every year as a kind of immersive experience for our customers and our collectors to come to Milton, West Virginia to take classes to have hands-on glass experiences, to buy specialty wares to enjoy the products that we make for the festival of glass,” Arnett said.

For each festival, Blenko creates a one-of-a-kind collector’s piece. This year, the festival’s theme is ‘Be There Or Be Square’ as an homage to this year’s square peg decanter.

“This year, as we do every year, we’re going to be making a special festival of glass decanter, called the square peg decanter. This year it’s squared olive decanter with a cobalt wrap and a crystal cube stopper,” Arnett said.

Blenko Glass’ 2023 square peg decanter with assorted glass pieces for the festival.

Credit: Emily Rice/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Blenko used to be one of 400 glass companies in West Virginia. Today, it is one of a handful in operation. To honor those fallen companies in the past, Blenko has been able to acquire old molds from those production companies to include in their festival piece.

However, this year, the festival’s main staple is slightly different.

“Blenko glass is of course known for its mid-century modern design,” Arnett said. “So for this year, in honoring British modernist art glass, we’re folding in some of that inspiration, some of that aesthetic and honoring other glass makers who have made tableware much like Blenko has by hand with bright colors and using old techniques.”

While Arnett may have only been in his position for four months, his passion for Blenko Glass runs deep.

“There’s nothing like being able to come into a place like this and be surrounded and suffused with color,” Arnett said. “It really drives me.”

Blenko is a 130-year-old company with roots that extend deep into West Virginia’s history.

“We have a history and a heritage here in West Virginia that’s hard to match anywhere,” Arnett said. “[Blenko] has been so deeply situated in place and with the people here in the Milton tri-state area and Appalachia.”

Glass decorations lay in a pan ready to be affixed to various pieces.

Credit: Emily Rice/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

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