The body is amethyst, cased over with crystal, (first picture, crystal at the bottom) the leaves are crystal applied after the vase was formed,...
If you can catch a finger nail in it, it's etched. It appears to be a proprietary etch, property of the customer. Not one that would have been...
Thanks, Bronwen, I knew that had to be a classic image, had no Idea what it was. I'm sure both ash trays are copies but of the original, not each...
I wonder, considereing what it is, could it have been called "white jade"? I do know it's glass, agree that it could be Beaumont.
I'm gonna guess....Empoli, Italy, mid 20th Century. Only as a suggestion, do not hold me to it. remember, I said "Guess".
Doyle & Co. No. 150, Page 112, Glass Tumblers ca. 1885.
All of your pieces (not the green lamp) are of the "Colonial" style. Ca. 1895-1935.
Very definitely acid etched. Can't place it, can't find my books.
Robert Coleman, Mt. Vernon, Ohio. He was making glass in the 1980s plus... Its a tumbler. He told me I'd have to practice ten years before I...
I can neither confirm nor deny that it is Heisey's No. 300 line, but it surely might be. (I can't find a catalog picture of it to prove it, but my...
Imperial flooded the market with "old looking" white glass about the time a couple of books on Antique Milk Glass hit the market, ca. 1947-8.
Culver was a decorating house, bought glass, painted it.
Arthritis/Tyelenol.....My better half, (Neila) was up to 8 Tylenol a day, and couldn't sleep. Went to Dr, "Do you still have a liver?" said the...
It's safe to say that of the Moser in Baldwin's books most is marked. In my experience, some is marked, not half, possibly not that.
Moser certainly did that type of wares, full ground with an etched/gold filled band. First quarter of the twentieth century.
Date it to the 1960's and '70's, That's when that color was popular.
Just off the top or our heads, it was made for collectors, hence the documentation, therefore of little interest to accumulators like us. Sorry...
If interested, Daisy and Button was first introduced as a cut pattern called "Russian." Ca. 1882-3 Then pressed glass versions started showing up...
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