Custom Wire Wrapped Dichroic Glass Bracelet 7 1/4 Sterling Silver
Custom Wire Wrapped Dichroic Glass Bracelet 7 1/4 Sterling Silver
Custom Wire Wrapped Dichroic Glass Bracelet 7 1/4 Sterling Silver
Custom Wire Wrapped Dichroic Glass Bracelet 7 1/4 Sterling Silver
Custom Wire Wrapped Dichroic Glass Bracelet 7 1/4 Sterling Silver
Custom Wire Wrapped Dichroic Glass Bracelet 7 1/4 Sterling Silver

Custom Wire Wrapped Dichroic Glass Bracelet 7 1/4 Sterling Silver

Regular price
$124.00
Sale price
$124.00

Custom Wire Wrapped Dichroic Glass Bracelet 7 1/4 Sterling Silver .935

Dichroic glass is glass which can display multiple different colors depending on lighting conditions.

One dichroic material is a modern composite non-translucent glass that is produced by stacking layers of metal oxides which give the glass shifting colors depending on the angle of view, causing an array of colors to be displayed as an example of thin-film optics. The resulting glass is used for decorative purposes such as stained glass, jewelry and other forms of glass art. The commercial title of "dichroic" can also display three or more colors (trichroic) and even iridescence in some cases. The term dichroic is used more precisely when labelling interference filters for laboratory use.

Another dichroic glass material first appeared in a few pieces of Roman glass from the 4th century and consists of a translucent glass containing colloidal gold and silver particles dispersed in the glass matrix in certain proportions so that the glass has the property of displaying a particular transmitted color and a completely different reflected color, as certain wavelengths of light either pass through or are reflected.[1] In ancient dichroic glass, as seen in the most famous piece, the 4th-century Lycurgus cup in the British Museum, the glass has a green color when lit from in front in reflected light, and another, purple-ish red, when lit from inside or behind the cup so that the light passes through the glass. This is not due to alternating thin metal films but colloidal silver and gold particles dispersed throughout the glass, in an effect similar to that seen in gold ruby glass, though that has only one color whatever the lighting.