Ratsy, Glass is never glazed. What you call a chamfer inside the mouth is a mold feature, from the porcelain mold. Glass is not made in two halves...
Cold wailer time, again....(I hate doing this...So why do it you ask. To bring us all down to reality is my answer.) This is not Early American...
Thank you, Marie, and Tall, for giving us just about all there is to know about the Sprig/Rival pattern and this particular piece. Only thing not...
I would buy it for Carder Steuben.
IO concur. Think Bohemian.
I don't want to bring excess moisture to your outing, (rain on your parade) BUT I believe the body of the vase was pressed, and the gray...
I'm not considered to have any knowldege of Oriental goods, but I would think that each of the damages to the top rim would reduce it's value by...
The feet are metal, either made by or for C. F. Monroe, probably by them, that was their main market, metal pieces, fancy, silver plated, etc....
Yes, that's Wave Crest, a 'dresser jar'. It might have been silk lined once. If memory serves, Wave Crest was a decorator, not a glass producer....
I'd favor opaline over milk glass. And yes, critters do make pieces more appealing.
Or a band of ruby then cut away. It's certainly not Ruby Stained
It reminds me of an Imperial pattern, but that's not it. I hope Tall can nail it.
'Twas the boulevard in Toledo (Ohio)in the 1940s
It seems that collectors are more interested in what company did the cutting than what design it is. They want a signature on the piece. I'm a...
Assuming the vase is McKee's Innovation, that is not considered part of the Brilliant period production. Innovation was cut over pressed, lime...
Dresser Jar, powder.
It appears to be cut glass, not pressed, the handle dates it to after 1875, when the style of handle changed. Being cut limits its (size of)...
I have a piece of heavy purple New England Glass that was stapled back together, and a Moser rainbow ewer/decanter 16 inches tall with the handle...
Thanks "crs" for the report. I'm remiss in that I didn't see this until now, (Thurs. Evening) I considered George a friend, though we'd never...
Only from the handle Id guess Westmoreland, but no assurances.
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