REVIEW · PRAGUE
Bohemian Glass blowing in Prague
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Glassblowing in Prague feels like alchemy. This short Prague workshop pairs private guide attention with real UNESCO-listed glassmaking traditions, and you end with something you can actually hold. You’ll watch professionals work a furnace up close, then learn how to shape your own piece without the usual crowd chaos.
The main catch is that the hands-on part is intentionally limited. Because the process is safety-heavy, most of the demanding steps stay in the glassmaker’s hands, so you’ll do smaller actions rather than full control of the work.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- A Hot-Shop Workshop in Prague’s Old Town
- What You’ll Make: Techniques, Color, and a Real Piece You Keep
- Close to the Furnace: Watching Pros and Doing Your Part
- Private Group Attention That Actually Changes the Experience
- The Beer Break and the Real Schedule: Cooling Takes Time
- Price and Value: Does $159.80 Add Up?
- Shipping vs. Next-Day Pickup: Choose Based on Your Travel Flow
- Logistics That Matter: Meeting Point, Duration, and a Short but Dense Session
- Who This Workshop Is For (and Who Might Want to Skip It)
- Should You Book Bohemian Glass Blowing in Prague?
- FAQ
- Where is the meeting point?
- How long does the glassblowing take?
- Is the workshop private?
- What language is the experience offered in?
- What is included besides glassblowing?
- Can I take the glass home the next day?
- Can I ship my glass instead of picking it up?
- Is there a mobile ticket?
- What if the furnace isn’t working on my day?
- Is service animal access allowed?
Key things to know before you go

- UNESCO-recognized technique in a working hot shop: you’ll see traditional handmade glass production processes in action
- Close to the furnace, not just watching from afar: you get unusually direct access to the workspace
- Private group format: your instructor focuses on your group only
- You’ll make your own souvenir piece: not just a demonstration
- Plan around the 12-hour cooling window: you’ll pick up next day or arrange shipping
- Beer is part of the wrap-up: a glass of beer follows the heat and work
A Hot-Shop Workshop in Prague’s Old Town

This experience is built for people who want to leave Prague with a souvenir that feels earned. You’re not buying glass from a shop floor and calling it a day. Instead, you’re working in a real glassmaking environment where the pace, heat, and tools are the point.
You meet at Staroměstské nám. 932/6 in Staré Město. That puts you in the heart of Prague’s Old Town, so you can easily pair this with a walk before or after (and, yes, it’s right in the orbit of the famous central sightseeing area). The workshop runs about 20 minutes of glassblowing time (approx.), but there’s also instructor time, safety instruction, and setup—so treat it as a short, focused activity more than a long class.
The private group setup matters more than it sounds. When it’s only your group, the glassmaker isn’t splitting attention across many people at once. In a skill like glassblowing, that usually means better pacing and clearer guidance.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague.
What You’ll Make: Techniques, Color, and a Real Piece You Keep

The headline promise here is simple: you’ll learn glassblowing techniques, create your own piece, and take it home. The workshop also includes a bit of a show-instruction combo—watching experienced glassmakers produce items like glasses and small statuette-style works right in front of you.
In practice, your final piece is shaped by two realities:
- Time is limited.
- The process is complex and tech-demanding.
The good news is you still get a tangible result. One person described choosing a color (green) and making a small vase; another made a drinking glass in about the same overall session flow. That matches how these shorter hot-shop sessions usually work: you choose what you want to create within the practical boundaries of the workshop.
If you’re the kind of traveler who likes tactile projects—something visual, imperfect in an honest way, and uniquely yours—this is a strong fit. Your hands won’t be doing every step, but you’ll still leave with a piece that looks like it came from you, not from a menu.
Close to the Furnace: Watching Pros and Doing Your Part

Here’s what makes this workshop feel different from the usual “watch and lightly participate” model: you get very close to the glass furnace and the production process. The format is described as practically not possible in conventional glass operations, and what that means for you is access.
You’ll likely see several techniques demonstrated while the working furnace stays central. Then you’ll cooperate with the glassmaker, but the hands-on portion is intentionally smaller. Reviews back this up: the guidance is friendly and accommodating, but the total time and safety demands reduce how much you can physically control.
So how should you think about your role?
- Expect the glassmaker to handle the most technical, high-risk steps.
- Expect you to contribute where you can: choosing a component, shaping within a controlled workflow, and doing the actions that don’t compromise safety.
- Expect the glassmaker to guide you closely, especially in the moments that matter.
If you’re hoping to fully master glassblowing in one sitting, you’ll be disappointed. If you want a guided taste of the craft with a keepsake at the end, you’re exactly the right target.
Private Group Attention That Actually Changes the Experience
A private tour sounds like marketing. Here, it’s functional. The workshop is offered for English-speaking participants and is listed as a private tour/activity, meaning it’s only your group.
That changes the feel in two ways:
- Faster back-and-forth. You can ask questions and get real-time corrections.
- More patience with your pace. Glassblowing doesn’t reward rushing. You’re guided through what the glass is doing and why the next step matters.
In at least one experience described, the instructor was close to the glassmaking craft full-time, with years of practice. Even without a long lecture, you can usually tell the difference between someone performing glass tricks and someone who works this process every day.
The bottom line: if you want a quieter, more personal creative hour than a big-group factory visit, this format is worth paying for.
The Beer Break and the Real Schedule: Cooling Takes Time
After the heat of the glassworks, you’ll settle in with a glass of beer. It’s not just a reward—it also signals that the “work” portion is done, and it’s time for the handoff process.
Then comes the part that can catch people off guard: your glass needs to cool down for 12 hours. The experience includes a free pick up the next day, because that cooling period matters for how the piece stays intact.
What to do with that information:
- If you’re staying in Prague overnight, the next-day pickup option is convenient and simple.
- If you’re leaving quickly—like departing the next morning—you’ll need a backup plan.
That’s why shipping is offered as an extra-cost option. One person had to reschedule and ended up shipping the finished piece because they couldn’t wait for the cooling and pickup window. That flexibility is a relief if your trip timeline is tight.
Price and Value: Does $159.80 Add Up?
At $159.80 per person, you’re paying for a mix of things that don’t show up in cheaper workshops:
- A private group setting (which usually means more instructor attention)
- Hot-shop proximity (close to the furnace and active production space)
- A guided keepsake (your own piece, not just a souvenir purchase)
- An included beer and an organized workflow
Are you getting a full “glass apprenticeship” experience? No. The timeframe is short, and the glassmaker handles much of the technically demanding work.
But here’s the value question that matters: you’re paying to turn your trip into a story and a physical result. That’s different from a museum ticket or a generic tour where your only memory is photos. If you’ve ever wanted a hands-on creative activity in Prague that still feels authentic, this is one of the better bets.
Shipping can change the math. The average shipping cost is listed at 80–100 EUR, depending on your country. If you’re planning to ship, ask yourself whether it’s worth adding that cost to avoid worrying about pickup timing.
Shipping vs. Next-Day Pickup: Choose Based on Your Travel Flow
You have two practical routes for taking your piece with you:
Option 1: Next-day pickup (included).
Your glass needs 12 hours to cool. The experience includes a free pickup the next day, which makes sense if you’re not flying out immediately.
Option 2: Shipping your piece (extra cost).
Shipping is available for an additional fee. The average is 80–100 EUR, and the price depends on your country. If you’re leaving Prague before the cooling time is complete, shipping becomes the sensible choice.
Here’s the key decision factor: how much you want to manage timing stress. If you like structure and you’re staying put in Prague overnight, pickup is easy. If you’re on a tight schedule or continuing on soon, shipping protects your souvenir from getting left behind.
Also note that one person’s experience shows shipping can work even when the workshop schedule changes (for example, when a furnace issue affects timing). That kind of fallback plan is worth having.
Logistics That Matter: Meeting Point, Duration, and a Short but Dense Session
The meeting point is Staroměstské nám. 932/6. From there, you can plan your day around a short workshop block. The overall glassblowing duration is listed at about 20 minutes, but expect the total activity rhythm to include safety explanation and instruction time.
One more scheduling reality: the furnace isn’t always predictable in real-world operations. In an example shared, when the furnace wasn’t working, the team offered rescheduling or a torch-work alternative. The lesson for you is simple: be flexible, and don’t schedule this as the one activity that must go perfectly or your trip plan collapses.
Because the workshop ends back at the meeting point, it’s easy to rejoin your Old Town plans afterward. You don’t need a whole afternoon of buffer time, which makes it ideal for travelers who want something memorable without rearranging the city.
Who This Workshop Is For (and Who Might Want to Skip It)
This is a great choice if you’re:
- More artistic than tour-bus minded
- Interested in traditional Bohemian glassmaking and the real hot-shop process
- Want a private experience with close instructor attention
- Happy with a short project that ends in a genuine souvenir
It might be less ideal if you’re:
- Expecting a lot of tool time and full ownership of every step
- Planning to leave Prague immediately and aren’t willing to pay for shipping
- Looking for a long class format (this is compact by design)
If your travel style is “small experiences that create lasting proof,” you’ll likely love it.
Should You Book Bohemian Glass Blowing in Prague?
I’d book it if you want one hands-on activity that feels unmistakably tied to Prague. The value isn’t just the final object—it’s the combination of UNESCO-listed tradition, close furnace access, and a private guide who stays focused while you make something real.
Before you click confirm, decide how you’ll handle the 12-hour cooling. If you can pick up next day, you’ll likely feel the best value. If you can’t, budget for shipping (80–100 EUR average) and plan your trip so you’re not stressed about timing.
For the right traveler, this is the kind of activity you remember on quiet evenings—when a small piece of your trip sits on a shelf and still looks warm.
FAQ
Where is the meeting point?
You meet at Staroměstské nám. 932/6, Staré Město, 110 00 Praha-Praha 1, Czechia.
How long does the glassblowing take?
The glassblowing portion is listed at about 20 minutes (approx.), though there will be instruction and setup time within the overall activity.
Is the workshop private?
Yes. It’s listed as a private tour/activity for only your group.
What language is the experience offered in?
The workshop is offered in English.
What is included besides glassblowing?
You’ll receive one included glass of beer. It’s also designed as a guided glassblowing experience where you create your own piece.
Can I take the glass home the next day?
Yes. Your glass needs to cool for 12 hours, and there is a free pickup the next day.
Can I ship my glass instead of picking it up?
Yes. Shipping is available for an extra fee, with an average cost of 80–100 EUR depending on your country.
Is there a mobile ticket?
Yes, the experience includes a mobile ticket.
What if the furnace isn’t working on my day?
You may be offered options such as rescheduling or an alternative activity like torch work, depending on what’s available.
Is service animal access allowed?
Yes. Service animals are allowed. The experience also notes it is near public transportation and that most travelers can participate.






















