Happy Birthday to our Blog!

We turn off 2 candles.

Two years ago, just in January, our Blog was born, the first blog entirely dedicated to the polishing of glass.

I don’t know exactly how I got this idea, what is certain is that my desire was to create a moment of confrontation, a “space” in which to give more information to anyone interested in the world of glass.

There is something very paradoxical …

we are in the era of sharing anything on the internet, people publish personal photos, even very intimate moments of their private life, photos of their children, images of their travels, it seems that it is the historical period of sharing.

It isn’t so, it isn’t true that we share information, because indeed people don’t share their skills, if you have a doubt about how to do something isn’t explained to anyone, if you need professional help isn’t easy to find.

It’s like saying, we publish the more “superficial” things, our skills we keep them close, we don’t let them circulate, we are almost reluctant to share them with others.

Is it the fear that blocks us?

I don’t know this.

What I know for sure is that I think it is right to circulate knowledge and if I know something I like to share it.

That’s why 2 years ago my Blog was born, the first (and only) Blog dedicated to the polishing of the glass.

Inside there are many articles regarding our sector, but above all there are many practical suggestions on how to improve glass polishing.

In the Blog we talk about the difficulties of the Glassworks, how much our glass industry has changed in the last 10 years, how difficult it is sometimes to keep up with the changes, how to be even more competitive.

I thank the glassworks who contacted me to ask me suggestions on how to improve their work, I thank those who put into practice the concrete suggestions he read in the articles and also those who pointed out to me that some things were not well explained and some steps had to be more in-depth.

I thank my staff who supported me in this challenge and above all I thank Laura, who transformed my words, sometimes a bit ‘confused, in simple articles and clear for all, without her I would not have made it.

Thanks, thanks, thanks.

Luca Moreschi.