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Granny's Glasses

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Category Archives: Unknown

Unknown White Goblets

17 Saturday Nov 2012

Posted by d.b. in Unknown

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I picked up four of these goblets recently at a thrift shop.  They intrigues me. I had them in and out of my basket several times.  I know absolutely nothing about them and have had no luck identifying them.  They might be modern for all I know.

They aren’t milk glass.  I’ve come across some reading on opaline glass.  This is what the Encyclopedia Brittanica has to say:

“opaline glass,  usually opaque glass or crystal, either white or coloured, made in France between approximately 1810 and 1890. Opaline resembles the milk glass of 16th-century Venice and the opaque, white glass associated with Bristol, Eng., in the 18th century.

The main centres of production were Creusot, Baccarat, and Saint-Louis. Items made of opaline included bowls, vases, boxes, cups, and decanters as well as objects used by perfumers and hairdressers.

The earliest colours used were turquoise blue, yellow, and pink (the latter not produced after 1840). In the mid-19th century, opaline was made in more vivid colours, in imitation of Bohemian glass. It was also produced in the form of crystal, semicrystal, glass, and pâte-de-riz (glass made by firing glass powder in a mold), the latter a Bohemian innovation. Sky blue—a colour invented in Bohemia in 1835—was copied at Baccarat and Saint-Louis about 1843; the glass used was generally pâte-de-riz. Ultramarine blue was most frequently used between 1845 and 1850. Some bicolour (white and blue) opaline was made at Baccarat in 1850. Purple opaline was made in small quantity about 1828 at the Paris factory of Bercy and also outside the capital at Choisy-le-Roi. Various greens were also produced, ranging from almond and sea green between 1825 and 1830 to less subtle shades of leaf green in later years.

Decoration included gilding, painting, and transfer printing. From 1840 onward copies of Chinese and Japanese porcelain were made in opaline glass.”

These glasses have a faint bronze/darkish rim.  Doesn’t look like it is a faded gilt edge however.  There are no mold marks and a smooth pontil.

Hope I can identify them!

Unknown Water Goblet

09 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by d.b. in Unknown

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Water Goblet

We were out on a fall drive on Saturday and stopped in Colborne for fries and antiques.  These glasses caught my eye, partially because they were $10.00 for five.  Might be a sign of their lack of value!  Nonetheless they appealed to me even if they are not my usual shape of choice.  They are red with an orange undertone.

I’ve been trying to find out anything about them – no markings.  Most of the patterns that I have come across, that have a similar stem, are European in origin. But no matches.

I don’t know if they are vintage or made last week for Pier 1.  I have posted them on the Elegant and Everyday Glassware forum for identification help, so we’ll see if anyone recognizes them.

They have a fall colour don’t they?  I set my Thanksgiving table with some amber Depression glass last night, but didn’t think to use these pieces.  They were in my office, not handy to the kitchen.  Out of sight, out of mind!

Pink Cow on Nest

06 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by d.b. in Unknown

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Animals, Cow

I’ve seen these cows online in pink and clear glass.  I don’t know anything about it but this is what the Heisey Museum says:

“Cow on a Nest” was made in Taiwan and sold by A. A. Importing of St. Louis. It has what some people have mistaken to be the Heisey Diamond H on the bottom, but the mark can best be described as an H in a square turned on its corner.  This item was never made by Heisey in any shape, size or color, and the quality of glass is quite poor when compared to Heisey glassware.  Several glass companies in the U.S. did and still do make items like this”

I didn’t even know that this was “supposed” to be a piece of Heisey.  My piece doesn’t have any markings.

I was interested in the company referenced – A.A. Importing.  They are active and sell  antique reproductions, giftware, and furniture items  to retail shops and other businesses.

I have no idea of the back story of my little cow, but it is pretty cute.  Fits in well with my chickens.  I think I need to get a bunny too!

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