At the heart of downtown Lancaster, Ohio, the Hot Glass workshop at the Ohio Glass Museum invites visitors to shape molten color into sculpted glass floats. Located at 124 West Main St, this two-hour, instructor-led session gives beginners and families a chance to choose two colors from more than sixty options, attach them to clear molten glass, and inflate the piece with a blow hose under close supervision. The class is limited to six participants, accepts ages five and up, and includes annealing so finished work is safe to collect the next day. Inside a lower-level studio reachable by elevator from the museum lobby, you’ll stand beside a glory hole and bench with all safety measures in place: closed-toe shoes are required, long or loose clothing and dangling jewelry are prohibited, and participants complete a waiver and safety questionnaire before they begin. Instructors coach you through each step — color application, gathering glass, inflation and shaping — so even first-timers leave with a solid, handmade gazing ball or float. Finished pieces are annealed for strength and held for pickup within two weeks; shipping is available for a fee. The experience is tactile and surprisingly physical. You’ll learn to time a breath, control the gather, and rotate the punty while the glass cools. Beyond the how-to, the studio exposes you to the materials that define regionally significant American glass: soda-lime glass infused with colored canes and frit that catch light like captured sunsets. The museum context gives the class a local angle—this is a place where contemporary practice meets a tradition of Ohio glassmaking passed down through generations. Practical details matter: arrive 15 minutes early and enter the glass double doors of 124 West Main St, then take the front lobby elevator to the lower level. Free two-hour downtown parking is available, with accessible spaces behind the museum (spots 75–78). Expect a roughly two-hour commitment; all sales are final, and a 24-hour notice is required to convert payment to museum credit. This workshop makes a dependable gift, a family-friendly outing, or an enrichment stop while exploring Lancaster’s historic downtown. It’s not just a class; it’s a hands-on encounter with heat, color and craft that transforms raw glass into a keepsake you helped create. Whether you’re an artist curious about hot techniques or a traveler looking for an active indoor experience, the Hot Glass session at the Ohio Glass Museum offers an immediate, memorable creative payoff. Bring a small camera for detail shots during demonstration, but keep it clear of workspaces; instructors will pause for photos. Wear comfortable clothes that cover arms. If shipping is chosen, allow extra time for packaging and transit; pickups are the fastest way to receive your piece. Plan accordingly.