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Monday, February 9, 2026
Murano & Burano, Venetian Lagoon, Venice, Italy
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Murano Glass Demo Guide - What to Look For and Common Pitfalls

How to select a Murano glass workshop visit: what a real demo includes, class sizes, commentary quality, and red flags to avoid.

11/2/2025
11 min read
Glass master shaping a vessel at the bench in a Murano furnace workshop

The best demos are less show, more craft. Here’s what to look for.

Signs of a quality demo

  • A working glory hole and furnace rhythm (constant reheats).
  • Clear commentary on steps and tools (marver, jacks, tweezers, shears).
  • Teamwork: maestro + assistant(s), with synchronized passes and timing.
  • Real finishing — not just pulling a small horse for photos.

Class size and sightlines

  • 8–15 people is ideal. You should stand or sit where heat and sound are safe but details are visible.
  • If the demo includes a hands‑on segment, it should be controlled and supervised.

The retail moment (and how to handle it)

  • Many demos end in a showroom. That’s fine — but you shouldn’t be pressured.
  • If you plan to buy, take photos of labels and ask about hallmarks, origin tags, and return policies.

Safety and etiquette

  • Follow distancing instructions; furnaces and punty rods are not props.
  • Ask permission before video; some workshops limit filming.

The best souvenir is understanding. Even if you don’t buy, you’ll leave seeing glass differently.

About the Author

Murano Glass Insider

Murano Glass Insider

I put this guide together to make your Murano & Burano day simple, insightful, and full of local tips.

Tags

Murano
Glass
Demo
Workshop
Factory

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