Casserole Dish and Other Glass Etching
by: Karen in AZ
from our HFPE Group
Supplies-
Glass
dish
Contact paper
Craft knife
Etching Cream
Gloves
Glass cleaner
Graphite paper
Stylus or pencil
Paper towel
Old paint brush
1.Create a design you want. I typed our last name in the font and font size I wanted on my computer and printed it out. I also used little clip art pictures around our name.
2. Cut a piece of contact paper at least 1″ bigger around the edges than your design. Place the contact paper on your dish where you want the design.
3. Place your printed design over the contact paper where you want it and place the graphite paper between your design and the contact paper and trace around the letters or design using a stylus or pencil. (If your contact paper is on the outside on the bottom of your dish you will want to transfer your name backwards, so when you are looking at it from the inside its not backwards. That is how I did mine.)
4. Using a craft knife cut the contact paper on the lines you traced. Once you are done remove the contact paper where you want it etched, leaving the rest on.
5. Make sure all the edges where you cut are down really good, then spray glass cleaner on a paper towel and gently clean the surface of your dish where you will be etching.
6. Put your gloves on and shake the etching cream bottle good. Using an old paint brush put the etching cream on generously where you want to etch. Let it sit for a minute, Then I take the etching cream off with my brush and put it back in the bottle, so it lasts longer.
7. Then under warm rinse the rest of the cream off and then take the contact paper off and you have your wonderful design!
From Contributors
Featured at our HFPE Group We just did this for our Super Saturday. My EL has a friend in Utah who does this for a living–you send her all the names/font choices/pictures info and she will mail you back all the stencils ready to go! We found this a HUGE help, because it would have taken a long time to print everyone’s info out, and change font sizes according to the size of their pan. All you have to do is tape your stencil on your pan and then peel it off and it’s ready to sandblast or do the etching cream. (We sandblasted ours, but I’ve heard either way is fine)
Here’s her info if anyone would like to contact her.
Michelle Topham
Stansbury Park, Ut.
(435) 843-1100
She charges, $3 for just your last name, and $4 for your last name plus a picture. There’s also a catalog she’ll send so you can pick fonts and pictures. We charged a flat rate of $5 each, plus they brought their own pan. This was our most popular class!
-Jill Angell in San Jose When we did this we took in several lettering templates and contact paper. Lay the templates down so that it reads reverse, trace onto contact paper and cut out with an x-acto knife. Pull backing off and adhere to bottom of dish. Spread on etching cream, let stay on for time suggested on cream. Rinse off in cool water being careful not to splash it on anything and preferably wear plastic gloves to protect skin. It is a fairly simple process..
Take an old credit card or anything else that can be used to scrape off the etching cream and put it back into the jar - it can be reused several times. Just remember it is an acid so take precautions about getting it onto your skin - also make sure you tell the ladies who sign up for the class that the etching cream WILL harm their clothes if it gets on them so to dress appropriately.
-Jenni Lanham










