![]() 11/20/2014 at 12:50 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
Suddenly, pants-fitment issues.
![]() 11/20/2014 at 12:56 |
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suddenly, your mother!
![]() 11/20/2014 at 12:56 |
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to further the HNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
Holla holla!
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:00 |
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Can't get on board. Too phallic.
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:03 |
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I wonder how hard it was to cut windows to this shape back then...
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:12 |
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I'M TRYNA HOLLA ATCHA BITCH LEMME HOLLA HOLLA HOLLA HOLLAHOLLAHOLLA
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:24 |
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More room for me.
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:25 |
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Just as hard as it is to make them now. I don' believe the techniques have changed.
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:30 |
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Well, we have computer-guided cutters and composite glasses that can be molded. Wouldn't they have had to hand-cut the windows back then? I don't know much about glasswork but it seems to me that complex rounded shapes would be a pain in the ass.
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:41 |
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Not really. They'd get molten glass and blow it into long cylinders. The cylinder was allowed to cool, then was re-heated and cut into an open sheet. It's during this time that the glass (while not red-hot anymore) is still pliable enough to be cut with scissors or another sharp implement. They also had tooling that could trace newly made glass and perform multiple breaks on a single sheet to get the desired shape they wanted. But yes, it was a pain in the ass I'm sure.
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:45 |
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what I see
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:56 |
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Creepin behind the bush.
![]() 11/20/2014 at 13:57 |
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Soon...
![]() 11/20/2014 at 14:23 |
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It's not like they were cranking these things out by the millions.