MOULDS, amongst the glass-grinders, are wooden frames, on which they make the tubes wherewith they fit their perspectives, telescopes, and other optic machines. These moulds are cylinders, of a length and diameter according to the use they are to be applied to, but always thicker at one end than the other, to facilitate the sliding. The tubes made on these moulds are of two kinds; the one simply of pasteboard and paper, and the other of thin leaves of wood
joined to the pasteboard. To make these tubes to draw out, the last or innermost only is formed on the mould; each tube made afterwards serving as a mould to that which is to go over it, but without taking out the mould from the first.