La Rochere

{{short description|French glass manufacturer}}

{{refimprove|date=April 2017}}

{{Infobox company

|name = La Rochere

|native_name = Verrerie de La Rochère

|founded = 1475

|industry = Glassware

|key_people =

|location =

|location_city = Passavant-la-Rochère

|location_country = France

|website = {{URL|http://www.larochere.com}}

}}

La Rochere is the oldest continuously working glass factory in Europe located

in the forests of the Lorraine and Franche-Comté regions that provided firewood for furnaces and ferns, the ashes of which made the potash necessary for the glass fusion.{{Cite web

|url=https://www.wayfair.com/La-Rochere-C482659.html

|title=La Rochere

|accessdate=25 February 2017

}}

History

File:La rochére 1904.jpg

In 1475 the founder Simon de Thysac, "Gentleman glassmaker", obtained permission to manufacture glasses at the "Rochiers", this is preserved in the National Archive in France. The production site is opened and the "hand made" manufacture of crystal glasses is shown and explained to visitors.{{Cite web

|url=http://www.wine-glasses-crystal.com/article/6-la-rochere-glassware

|title=La Rochere Glassware

|accessdate=25 February 2017

}}

Workshops by the [[Studio glass|studio glass artist]] [[Jörg F Zimmermann|Jörg F. Zimmermann]]

At the suggestion of the collectors France and Wolfgang Kermer in 2003, La Rochere organized workshops with the German studio glass artist Jörg F. Zimmermann every year until 2019. Numerous visitors were always able to witness how Zimmermann worked freely in collaboration with glassblowers from the glassworks, creating his ″Wabengläser″ (″honeycomb glasses″), which established his international reputation.France Kermer: La magie du verre: Jörg F. Zimmermann, La Gazette des Hauts du Val de Saône, № 33, Magazine été 2013, Jussey 2013, p. 8

See also

References

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