The duo responsible for the period glassware in the hit TV show Outlander, will be demonstrating how they make their distinctive goblets and tableware in Quarley near Andover.

Mark Taylor and David Hill, known as The Glassmakers, have been supplying the TV and film industry for more than 20 years, beginning with Ridley Scott’s blockbuster movie Gladiator.

For all seven series of Outlander, the time-slip historical fantasy, they created carafes, wine and whiskey glasses, sweet meat dishes, open flame oil lamps, and jars and bottles for the surgery of Claire Fraser, the time-traveling Second World War nurse.

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As Outlander fans will know, the action begins in the Scottish Highlands prior to the Jacobite uprising, before moving to the court of King Louis VI in Paris, then pirate-ridden Caribbean and the British Colony of North Carolina as revolution looms - all requiring different styles of historically and culturally accurate 18th-century hand-blown glass.

The glassware has been seen in many of the key moments of the series - the wedding banquets of Claire and Jamie Fraser in series one and their daughter in series five, and Claire and Jamie’s reunion toast in series three - handcrafted copies of which have since made their way into the homes of Outlander fans.

The Glassmakers are based at Project Workshops, a complex of artist studios and Talos Art Foundry.

David and Mark will be demonstrating their craft, with an exhibit including Rome, Medieval, 18th century and Outlander glass, at the Christmas Open Studios on November 19 and 20, 10am - 4pm.

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Other artists opening their studios include textile artist and Sky Arts Landscape Artist of the Year competitor, Katy Rundle, award-winning painters Soraya French and Sally Newton, life-size bronze sculptor Matt Duke, ceramic animal sculptor Elaine Peto, glassblowing brothers Reg and Barry Thompson, furniture designer Jeremy Smith, and stone carver Maya Martin, with an opportunity to see and buy the work of popular mythical fantasy artist and writer, Hannah Willow.

Entry and parking is free. For more information visit project-workshop.co.uk