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Daily Activities

Glassblowing Demonstrations
- Glass Shop
- Daily
- 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Feel the heat of this 2,000-year-old art where skilled glassblowers of Greenfield Village demonstrate historical techniques with a modern twist. You can find many of their handcrafted pieces available for sale in our gift shops.

Printing Demonstrations
- Printing Office
- Daily
- 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Start the presses! Join us for demonstrations of typesetting and printing, plus insights into how the printing press has influenced modern communication. You can find many of these handcrafted pieces available for sale in our gift shops.

Weaving Demonstrations
- Weaving Shop
- Daily
- 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Watch for weavers at work in the village. The Weaving Shop will be demonstrating traditional techniques on our Colonial Loom, Fly Shuttle Loom and Cleo Loom. See if you can spot the technological advances in early looms that led to modern computer-aided processes. You can find many of their handcrafted pieces available for sale in our gift shops.

Pottery
- Pottery Shop
- Daily
- 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Look in as true American artisans of Greenfield Village craft unique ceramic objects from redware, stoneware and porcelain. On select days, experience an up-close look as artisans craft unique pottery on the potter's wheel. You can find many of their handcrafted pieces available for sale in our gift shops.

Liberty Craftworks Hands-On Activities
- Liberty Craftworks Activity Center
- May 16-17 & 22-23 & 29-30, Jun 12-13, Jul 11-12, Aug 7-8, Sep 26-27
- 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Join our presenters for an engaging experience with hands-on activities inspired by the seasons, featuring a variety of themed weekends. You'll have the chance to explore crafts such as weaving, printing, pinch pots and corn husk dolls. Activity area is located in front of Spofford Sawmill.
The rush of the mill pond draws you in as the sounds and motion of early American manufacturing surround you. Skilled artisans practice authentic period crafts and trades. View them all daily as they work with the techniques that are, in some cases, centuries old.
Highlights

Artifact
Glass Shop
The Glass Shop was constructed in 1930 to demonstrate the art of glass making as practiced in nineteenth century America. It was modeled after the Boston and Sandwich Glass House, located in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. In 2005, the shop was rebuilt, enlarged and updated with modern equipment. Today, our artisans create up to 10,000 pieces of historic and contemporary Studio Glass annually.

Artifact
Printing Office & Tin Shop
The Printing Office was built in Greenfield Village in 1933. For decades, the building served as a utilitarian print shop for Greenfield Village. At one time, the building housed a recreated 19th-century small town newspaper print shop and tinsmithing studio. Now, only the print shop remains.

Artifact
Weaving Shop
The Greenfield Village Weaving Shop demonstrates the evolution of textile production from the colonial home and craft shop, through the Industrial Revolution to commercial factory. Housed in a converted 1840s Georgia cotton mill, the Weaving Shop contains a number of working looms, including one of the few operating mechanical Jacquard looms in North America.

Artifact
Pottery Shop
The Pottery Shop was designed in 1939 by Edward L. Cutler, an architect who helped Henry Ford create his historic village. Designed as a reproduction rice mill to house 19th-century threshing machinery from a South Carolina plantation, the building was repurposed as the Pottery Shop in 1984. Today, visitors view demonstrations of hand-made pottery including salt-glaze and slip wares.

Artifact
Armington & Sims Machine Shop
This building essentially provides support for a system of shafts and pulleys that distribute mechanical energy to the rows of metal working machine tools arranged along the building's length. The machinists who worked in shops like this could tackle a wide range of jobs. America's nineteenth century machine shops were a training ground for many technological innovators.

Artifact
Loranger Gristmill
Gristmills -- usually among the earliest businesses established in a community -- ground grain harvested by local farmers. This mill, originally located in Monroe, Michigan, was set up to grind both corn and wheat. It incorporates a sophisticated conveyor system, developed by Oliver Evans in the late 1700s, that moves grain through the building to undergo a variety of processes.

Artifact
Davidson-Gerson Gallery of Glass
The Henry Ford's glass collection is one of the most comprehensive in the United States, numbering approximately 10,000 pieces. The gallery traces the history of American glass from the 18th century through the present, including works by important artists like Louis Comfort Tiffany and masters of the Studio Glass movement. Built as a machine shop in 1888 in Lapeer, Michigan, this building was moved to Greenfield Village in 1931.
Liberty Craftworks
Check out some of the sights you'll enjoy first-hand when you journey through the Liberty Craftworks district in Greenfield Village.





