Blue with Lighter Blue Older Looking Vase with An E. Do you know maker?

Discussion in 'Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain' started by alynnfin, Feb 27, 2026 at 7:43 PM.

  1. alynnfin

    alynnfin Well-Known Member

    I bought this older looking vase with I think an older blue and lighter bluish glaze. There is a smallish capital E impressed in the bottom which is almost too lightly impressed to see or I suppose it could be a 3 pronged rake pointing down instead of an E. Does anyone recognize the glaze technique or know what the smallish capital E impressed on the bottom stands for? I bought at a thrift store. It measures 8 inches tall. I apologize because there is glare and reflections in the glaze in the photos. Any help would be appreciated. Thank you. IMG_9926.jpeg IMG_9928.jpeg IMG_0329.jpeg IMG_9914.jpeg
     
    johnnycb09 and Any Jewelry like this.
  2. kentworld

    kentworld Well-Known Member

    Lovely glaze but I have no idea of maker. I think that is an E.
     
  3. Iconodule

    Iconodule Well-Known Member

    Beautiful cobalt glaze! My guess is studio potter, not a mass production operation. Some two-tone glazes are dipped. First one part of the pot/plate/etc. is dipped. Then the other side. (The glazes may run together & create a third color as they mix as well creating interesting patterns.) In this case, it looks the lighter glaze does not cover the upper rim so it must be painted over the deeper blue instead of dipped. The angularity of some of the edges created suggest a flat brush, rather than dipping. (Is the lighter glaze lustre or is that just sunlight reflecting from the glossy surface? I think the latter but cannot be sure what is photographic & what is inherent to the glaze. Lustres are a third firing with metallic glaze and are iridescent.)

    For trying to identify the potter's mark (often impossible--not all are recorded) it helps to know the provenance. Where did you find it? If it is from a local potter you may be able to inquire from local or regional craft guilds. For example, Southern Highlands Craft Guild in southern Appalachia.

    I looked through the Marks Project without success although I could have missed someone. Those are American potters: https://www.themarksproject.org/. (I assume they mean USA rather than both continents.)
     
  4. alynnfin

    alynnfin Well-Known Member

    Thank you so much for all the information on the glaze. There is a lot of glare in my photos, so that is probably what you see. I do try to look at themarksproject site, not sure I did this time though, so thank you for checking. I do appreciate your information about the glaze.
     
  5. say_it_slowly

    say_it_slowly The worst prison is a closed heart

    I don't know your mark but it did occur to me that if you rotate it, it could also be an M or a W if the artist liked squared lettering.
     
    kentworld and Any Jewelry like this.
  6. alynnfin

    alynnfin Well-Known Member

    Thank you. I will check.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted
Similar Threads: Blue Lighter
Forum Title Date
Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain Help dating Murano glass little blue grape cluster Feb 13, 2026
Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain Small Ironstone Blue Willow Pattern Plate Feb 3, 2026
Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain Vtg Embossed Blue & White Flower Vase w Handles-need help identifying Jan 20, 2026
Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain Blue aesthetic movement vases identification Dec 25, 2025
Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain Flow Blue Turkey Plates Nov 24, 2025

Share This Page