| Furnace Name | Archaeology | Description | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neil | Ribe Circular design | A "teapot" design. Single chimney, with annealing pot attached to one side. A single working port cut into the body. Charcoal is loaded through the working port or chimney. Walls are standard thickness (3cm) and have a very pronounced curve joining walls and floor in a bowl shape to aid in charcoal concentration. The working port is cut high on the wall. | |
| Sarah | Ribe Oval | A smaller version of the standard shape built with a single chimney. This had originally been intended to work as a single working port but the plan was changed. A port was cut into each end, and a diverter added to the inside. The air port was cut in the usual location. | |
| Goderich | Ribe Oval | Dual chimney oval furnace, cobb construction. Internal construction includes gentle slopes from walls to floor, and a large air diverter opposite the air port. There is no opening cut for charging - charcoal is added through the chimneys. Working ports are cut into each end. Right port uses cuts angled up into the furnace. Left port cuts angle down into the furnace. Right port produces more heat onto the bead maker. | Good functional furnace with 10 hours of burn time. |



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Decorating a bead with reticella |
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Drawing reticella rod |
| Creating millifiore |