Lind is credited with depicting two glassworks in the Pohorje region, the glassworks in Josipdol and the Benediktov dol.
The smaller painting depicts the glassworker settlement in the village of Josipdol, near Ribnica na Pohorju. The first house on the left was once the administrative building of the glassworks and no longer exists. The first house on the right side of the road, where a sawmill for cutting stone once stood by the stream, has also been demolished. Worker houses follow, and at the very end of the village, on the right side, was the glassworks building. At the foot of the hill, a chute was constructed leading into the valley, used to transport timber.
The larger picture shows the Benediktov dol glassworks, built by Benedikt Vivat in Smolnik, near Ruše. The houses on the roadside were occupied by employees, while the large brick building with a garden housed the owner, Benedikt Vivat, and his family. This building is still standing today and bears the inscription B.V. on its façade (the initials of the owner) and the year 1835. The largest architecture is the glassworks building, while the smaller buildings next to it housed a joinery workshop and a warehouse for wooden moulds. Towards the river there was also a glass warehouse. A blacksmith's shop, a quartz-grinder’s and a glass grinder's shop are shown by the water. The owner, Benedikt Vivat, is sitting in a carriage, while his sons Edvard and Benedikt are coming towards the bridge. A fisherman, laundresses and a woman wrapping glass in straw are painted by the water, while a labourer and a servant with a horse are close by.