As for the covenants of the succession and the mandate of the Muslim rulers, the manufacture of glass marshebat and arabesque art was also popular. Even the small types of transparent glassware remain to this day; even small ones have been made with very fine detail and bear drawings of various monuments. Glassware in Pharaonic times was manufactured around ready-made molds. The method of blowing glass was not used until the Roman era. Textile was a popular art that flourished especially in the Coptic culture and continued during the following centuries of succession and the rule of Muslim rulers;
The presence of large numbers of craftsmen in their creative and creative ways has allowed their experience to pass from generation to generation. The artisans were divided into groups, each of which had a chairman who managed its affairs and disagreed among its members. The districts of Egypt had areas dedicated to craftsmen and gold and copper makers. It is clear that the Egyptian craftsman was educated and trained by his father, at an early age. The children were helping the work group of their parents to learn the rules of craft. This was the case in Egypt until the Ottoman era; Egypt lost many of its craftsmen and skilled artists who were forced to move to Istanbul, the capital of the empire. Thus, Egypt experienced a period of technical stagnation, which lasted until the beginning of modern times.