“Cherryhill with the bottom serrations,” The serrations around the bottom of the bottle help it to grip the metal conveyor belt as it is moved...
Cold water time. The serrations about the bottom are there to help the piece move toward the annealing process as it moves along a conveyor from...
It may be porcelain, it's not glass.
I'd call it a "vinegar and oil bottle" too. Note that the entire (well almost all) the outer surface is ground and polished. Nice piece, too bad...
Nimrod was one of a very few 'sand carvings' that Heisey did, sand blasting using stencils. The designs were primarily art Deco, but not totally...
The proliferation of tiny diamonds seem to have come from perhaps Turkey, in the last 10 or 20 years.
Tall said " "it's manganese in the glass that is used for clarity that will cause a faint glow with blacklight in total darkness." (Cited from:...
I, too, like your bowl. The ring is indicative of higher quality glass, the design in the bottom makes me wonder if it's a logo of some sort. I...
Libbey is still molding glasses. In Machines.
Now that we mention it, we did have a large canary (Vaseline) jug, cut and engraved that was deemed to be the lower portion of a hookah, (or...
You may well be right. My sources are not documents, but people, dealers, mostly.
I've been calling this Bohemian for over a decade. No proof. Moorish/Persian, for the Islamic market. Again, no documentation. Just adding more...
I just paged through about 200 pages of the middle of Hajdamach, British Glass, saw no glass of the form or decoration of the above....
Without the mark I'd have said Harrach, have had a fair number of pieces with that decoration. Dunno the mark, perhaps a wholesaler/distributor?
I'd have said Imperial, in the amber/avocado '70s. Yeah, It's from a Heisey mold. By then Imperial had stopped using the Heisey mark in response...
This is a tumbler, could be called 'barrel shaped', goblets must have a stem, not only a foot. I dunno about it's age, don't recognize the...
How's this? Quality doesn't enter into it, there's more work involved in this piece than Fenton would have put in a similar piece. This is blown...
I'm a glassie, what? Burnt Dirt? don't know nothing about it. BUT, Two blue crossed swords? Fake Meissen, without a doubt. Now, I know they're...
That shoots that idea...
Just a guess, but this looks like a goblet without its' stem. Is the base flat ground? Machine made glass (as this is) would not have a ground base.
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