Local News
Couple restores church’s stained glass windows
Lisa Petty has worked 30 years at a job she considers more fun than toil – creating and restoring stained glass artwork.
Petty started working in high school for Studio Stain Glass, owned by Peggy Ragland Hobson. After working for Hobson for five years, Petty started her own business: Lisa’s Custom Stained Glass.
“I’m preserving someone else’s work,” Petty said. “Once one of these windows is lost, it is lost forever.”
Along with her husband, Gene, Petty restored three stained glass windows for Sharpsville Methodist Church. The work started in September and now is complete – in plenty of time for the church’s Christmas service.
Petty replaces broken pieces of stained glass with glass she obtains from Kokomo Opalescent Glass.
Sharpsville Methodist’s stained glass windows were created in 1908. Over the course of a century, heat had caused the windows to sag in the middle as the grout fell out.
To replace a broken piece of glass, Gene said that sometimes the removal of the surrounding glass is required.
Once that is completed, each piece of glass is individually soldered into place with soft lead. Grout is then installed and the glass is polished.
“It’s very labor-intensive,” Gene said. “Everything is hands on.”
He said the process starts by determining how brittle the window is before it is removed and transported to the Kokomo work area.
One of the windows for the Sharpsville church had 50 pieces of broken glass that had to be replaced, he said.
The couple worked on windows in a church north of Peru that was vacant for 20 years. It took two years to repair the stained glass windows.
Lisa’s artwork is on view at the Kokomo Rescue Mission and Bethel Tabernacle Church of God in Kokomo, just to name a few churches that have used the Pettys’ restoration and creation skills.
The couple restored 72 stained glass windows at Galveston First Baptist Church, a project Gene described as the most difficult windows they have restored.
Like any business, there are times of feast and famine, Lisa said. It can be a full-time job, she added.
In addition to restoring stained glass windows, Lisa designs and creates her own artwork for stained glass lampshades, windows, signs and custom-made cabinet doors and sun catchers.
She has created windows for Pastariffic and Martino’s in Kokomo.
Lisa works with the customer on the design and how it will fit into the decor of a home or business. She hand-draws or uses a computer program to create the design.
The cost depends on the size and the amount of glass pieces that are used. A 24-inch by 24-inch window can cost $450.
Every piece of artwork Lisa creates is an original. She won’t copy another designer’s work.
The company’s Web site is www.lisascustomstainedglass.com
- Local News
-
-
Kokomo church struggles to pay cleanup debt
Pastor Dwight Hobson says he can’t understand why the state of Indiana is insisting on taking the money out of his collection plate.
After all, Hobson says, he is saving the state money by counseling teenagers on Kokomo’s near east side, keeping them away from gangs, drugs and teen pregnancy.
-
GM not changing anything for now
General Motors leaders on Wednesday addressed the company’s business operations and competition to its workers in Kokomo, GM said.
GM spokesman Kevin Nadrowski said company leaders spoke to their Kokomo employees during a routine update meeting. The company told the workers it is "assessing its business model," he said, but he would not further comment on the discussion.
“We’re not making any announcements, and there are no immediate changes to
operation,” he said. -
County council OKs funds for event center repairs
The Howard County Council on Tuesday night approved funding for repairs to the Kokomo Event Center’s roof, which should cost about a third as much as previously estimated.
-
‘Delphi isn’t closing anything’
Delphi Automotive Systems LLC says it will not close any of its operations in Kokomo.
Company spokeswoman Linda Ferries has responded to reports posted this afternoon on Inside INdiana Business’ website. She said the reported information is incorrect. The Indianapolis-based news agency quoted United Auto Workers Region 3 Director Maurice Davison as saying Delphi will phase out its Kokomo operations in 2012.
-
Nude drawings prompt arrest
Two drawings that police say depict a naked underage girl have allegedy landed a Sharpsville man behind bars on two counts of felony possession of child pornography.
-
Korean War veterans honored in Armistice Day event
A handful of Korean veterans stood at attention Tuesday to honor the brave soldiers who didn’t make it home after the three-year war in Southeast Asia.
-
Center Road closed for U.S. 31 work
Center Road is now closed between 150 East and 350 East, due to construction work on the U.S. 31 Kokomo Corridor bypass.
-
Councilman brings up business prospect at meeting
Kokomo Common Councilman Bob Cameron took more than a few people by surprise Monday when he asked area economic development director Jeb Conrad to come to the microphone.
-
Standoff ends in suicide
A Tipton County man allegedly fired a shotgun at a neighboring house late Monday before committing suicide, Howard County Sheriff Marty Talbert reported.
-
Duke Energy cuts power to apartments
Duke Energy Corp. says it had to cut power Tuesday to a Kokomo apartment building that dates back to the Great Depression because of “serious safety hazards.”
- More Local News Headlines
-






