Classes
Your Guide to January-March 2022 Classes Is Here!
By Cathy Niland | 11.6.2021Goodbye 2021, hello 2022, and hello to a slew of new opportunities to get creative in the new year. Our next member registration day is this Tuesday, November 9 and before classes open, you can explore all our new, rare, popular, continuing, and youth offerings.
We’re especially excited for you to discover the 16 new classes we’ll be running starting in January 2022. Machine Shop is hosting its first-ever 3-Hour Taster where students will make their very own small, metal hammer. Woodworking is offering classes like Take Home Jigs and Sharpening to help students build their best projects. And four new Glas Flameworking classes provide plenty of opportunities for you to explore new techniques behind the torch. We also recently updated our to make finding classes easier than ever. You can now search by department, level, day, time, and age with lightning-fast speed. We’ve also introduced sliders for price and number of class seats remaining, as well as an option to hide sold-out classes. And with the drop-down menu, you can select both a preset date range or customize your own calendar.If you’re not a member, public registration will open the following Tuesday, November 16. But of course, that means your favorite class could fill up before then! Not only do members get first dibs on newly released classes, but they also get 10% off class tuition—always! And if you have your eyes on an upcoming lab session, those are a member-exclusive perk as well.
Become a member by registering online and your benefits will go into effect right away: Tap into your new VIP status to ensure you always get a spot in your favorite class.
Don’t Miss These Brand New Classes
Explore 16 new offerings in Glass Flameworking, Woodworking, Machine Shop, and more!3-Hour Taster: Machine Shop
Learn how to safely operate a mill and lathe, while working on a brass-headed hammer to take home.A Finer Table
Students who enjoyed making the mortise and tenon table in Woodworking I can go deeper into the process to design, plan, and build a table with a drawer in this continuing level Woodworking class.Prerequisite: Woodworking I
Basic Bicycle Maintenance
In this class we will learn how to fix a flat tire, replace cables and housing, and perform the fine-tuning adjustments for brakes and shifting.Bicycle Mechanics
In this class we will learn the in-depth anatomy of a bike and become acquainted with the tools used in a professional shop with a focus on hubs, bottom brackets, headsets, wheel truing, derailleur hanger repair, and more.Enamel Drawing
Students will practice using transparent enamel to enhance drawings made in the metal itself (‘basse-taille), scratching lines through unfired enamel to reveal the surface underneath (‘sgrafftio’), and surface drawing using special pencils, pens, chalk, or crayons.Fused Glass Decals
Your own photos, drawings, and images can be fused to glass. Bring a jpeg to the workshop and we will print them onto special decal paper that is then fired onto glass, becoming a permanent decoration.Fused Glass Wall Vase
Design a wall hanging vase with different color glass, fiber paper, powder glass, and copper wire.Glass Dragons
Develop your sculptural skills on an oxy-propane torch transforming borosilicate glass. Using the dragon’s own breath—fire—you will make wild and wonderful dragons of all colors and styles.Prerequisite: Glass Flameworking I
Glass Flameworking Lab – 1 Day
Practice the skills you learn in class and explore new possibilities with your craft. No instruction is provided during lab sessions, but a lab monitor will be present to answer questions, manage safety, and provide overall support.Prerequisite: Glass Flameworking I or Glass Beads I and Crucible membership
Glass Hearts
Using an oxy-propane torch, students will shape glass into pendants and light catchers, while adding decorative elements like wings, if desired!Prerequisite: Glass Flameworking I
Glass Sea Creatures
Explore the underwater world of sea creatures with borosilicate glass. Using an oxy-propane torch, students will sculpt octopus, shells, fish, and starfish!Prerequisite: Glass Flameworking I
Hand Tools
This introduction to hand planes, chisels, saws, and proper workbenches is meant for people who would like to work with wood without using machines.Ornamental Machining
You will be introduced to the basics of operating mills and lathes with less focus on traditional precision and more on the unique potentials for cutting and shaping metal and other materials.Saw & Solder Champleve
Using design techniques like sawing, filing, sweat soldering, wet packing, stoning, finishing, and patina, students will create a design in metal, solder it to a metal backing, then fill the open areas in the design with colorful enamels to be fired in the kilns.Prerequisite: Enameling I
Sharpening
In this class, we’ll teach you the basic methods of sharpening edged tools using waterstones, and give you enough knowledge to purchase the supplies you need to continue at home.Take Home Jigs
Learn about how to properly use jigs, then use the machines in our workshop to make a precise bench hook and a shooting board with miter attachments. Bring your own bench or block plane, or use ours to see what will be right for you.Prerequisite: Woodworking I
Crucible members get perks!
Members get early access to class registration, 10% off class tuition and Crucible merch, invitations to exclusive events, unique member gifts, and more.Popular and Rare Classes
These rare and popular classes fill up fast! Don’t wait to register.Blacksmithing I
Learn the basics of blacksmithing! This class teaches the fundamental skills needed to forge steel and understand blacksmithing tools. We will introduce tapering, upsetting, flattening, dishing, and bending of hot steel. Students make small projects, such as spoons, knives, forks, and hooks.Bladesmithing
This specialized course focuses on the forging techniques needed to produce sharp-edged tools of high-carbon steel. We will cover blade design, control of steel grain structure, hardening and tempering methods, steel finishes, and handle construction. Emphasis is on learning the fundamental skills needed to forge a good knife.Prerequisite: Blacksmithing II