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#196850 05/23/03 08:48 AM
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It's a long shot I know and not expecting much response here but I don't suppose anyone out there knows anything about antique glassware?

I've inherited a couple of pieces from my grandmother. I think they're beautiful and wouldn't part with them for the world, but they have absolutely no history with them, no distinguishing marks that I can find, so at the moment they could be mass-produced from Woolworths or genuine antiques for all I can fathom.

I've spent many frustrating hours trying to find similar pieces on the net, but unless you really know what you're looking for it's like looking for a needle in a haystack.

I'd love to know their origins though, who created such beautiful pieces....so if there is anyone out there with some knowledge or information on a website that might help me track them down, please mail me?

Thanks!

LabRat smile (who figures if FoLCs don't know no one will)



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


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#196851 05/23/03 03:26 PM
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Labby,

I don't know much about glass, but I do know that there are several very good books out there that could help. I have found a few websites that might prove helpful too.

http://www.speakeasy.org/~duchess/identify.html

http://www.erasofelegance.com/may2001_glass.html

http://www.woodsland.com/carnivalglass/pages/trade1.htm

Hope that some of these help you, specially the one at the top.. smile1


Marns
~pobody's nerfect
#196852 05/23/03 06:57 PM
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Lab, do you have a digicam? If so, you could post pictures of the items - just on the longshot that someone may recognize them...

Just an idea smile

Melisma (wishing the Rat some luck with the project, here under her Rock)


Do, or do not. There is no try.
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#196853 05/23/03 11:35 PM
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Thanks, Marnie! I'll check those out.

Mel, thanks for the suggestion too. smile I didn't post photos deliberately because I wasn't anticipating researching it here on the mbs. Could end up being a very long and boring thread for anyone but me. goofy I was intending to leave that for an email discussion. smile

If it jogs anyone's memory though, here's a description of the pieces:

Glass sugar bowl and creamer set: Clear glass with gold band around the rim and base and stylised pattern of berries, leaves. Leaves are in gold and berries represented by groups of five red dots, with the dots but not the 'leaves' slightly raised on the surface of the glass.

Set of six sherry goblets: Very small and delicate; gold chased around rims with spiral/twisted clear glass stems. The goblet part is clear glass but banded in gold of different thicknesses, so that not much of the clear glass shows.

And I'll think about chasing down Stuart to take pictures of them if anyone thinks it might help them identify them. Although that first site of Marnie's looks very promising.

Thanks for the help!

LabRat smile



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


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#196854 05/24/03 01:23 AM
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Can't speak for Marns, of course. But as to me, I'll do anything to help the Rat and maybe prod her back into writing some more fic. Any rating. Honestly smile

Melisma (under her Rock, wondering if the Rat would like a cheese block carved into a naked Cl...er, a bare-chested Clark. Yeah, a bare-chested Clark laugh )


Do, or do not. There is no try.
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#196855 05/24/03 02:02 AM
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ROTFL, Mel. Ulterior motive, huh?

LabRat (who, yes, should really be opening up the SDB file instead of coming back in here for another visit...)



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


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#196856 05/25/03 01:35 AM
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Perhaps. But also happy to donate my two cents (Canadian: the exchange is ridiculously high these days) to a worthy cause...

dance

Melisma (giggling harder here under her Rock)


PS - BTW, did you ever ID that glassware? I have to stick to the thread topic, ya know smile


Do, or do not. There is no try.
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#196857 05/25/03 01:51 AM
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Waiting for Stuart to break out the digital camera and take some photos, Mel. But if I ever do track them down, I'll post an update. smile

Thanks again for the help.

LabRat smile



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


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#196858 05/25/03 04:16 AM
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LabRat, try these people: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/antiquesuk/
This is the Brit "Antiques Roadshow". You don't have to be willing to sell to get them to appraise. And they have tons of experts. You also can e-mail them your photos and don't have to show up in person with the stuff in hand.
We love the British version of AR because your stuff is so much older wink .
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Artemis
-- going back to try her hand at "Britspeak"
P.S. I killed them on the game, thanks to you all here. Until I got to "Toss". Which I found out is a "Bung" which I'm not even sure what that is in American. Hee hee - they had "jumper". Boy that was easy. smile


History is easy once you've lived it. - Duncan MacLeod
Writing history is easy once you've lived it. - Artemis
#196859 05/25/03 04:43 AM
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Thanks, Artemis! This must be a new innnovation, because I've tried their website in the past and they had nothing like this. Thanks for the headsup!

Oh and the only useage I know of in the UK for bung is as a bribe.

LabRat smile



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


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#196860 05/25/03 11:22 AM
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The UK term was "toss" which is only a verb, not a noun over here! Bung in American is a stopper on a barrel or keg (i.e. a big one) A stopper in a bottle is just a stopper or cork.
However, I'll remember your comment and if I'm ever asked for a bung in Britain (almost rhymes), I'll know what they want!
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Artemis


History is easy once you've lived it. - Duncan MacLeod
Writing history is easy once you've lived it. - Artemis
#196861 05/25/03 10:25 PM
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Toss? Oh! Yes, I see the context now. Was about to say never heard of it. goofy Yes, you could use bung in that sense, but gosh I haven't actually heard anyone use it to mean throw something for, well, centuries. <G> Still would say 'Toss that over here' though.

Regional variations might apply here though. wink

LabRat smile



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


The Musketeers
#196862 05/25/03 10:32 PM
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Something a little more local for you, Labby:
BBC site - this is the collectors guide. smile


Avia


"I get it, you're a ghost. You're dead. Big accomplishment, move on. You see a light anywhere? Go towards it okay?"

Cordelia in 'Rm w/a Vu' - Angel episode 1x05
#196863 05/25/03 11:21 PM
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Thanks, Avia smile

BTW, Artemis, I've trawled through the Antiques Roadshow site and can't find anything about being able to email them for an 'appraisal'. Can you direct me to where I'm missing it? Thanks!

LabRat smile



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


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#196864 05/26/03 02:50 AM
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Just to add to the confusion, I use bung regularly... along the lines of:

"Bung it over here."

So it might well be regional...

And complicating things further, remembering from my school chemistry a bung is what we called the stoppers in test-tubes, so I guess it can be any size stopper...

Helga smile


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Intelligence is not putting them in a fruit salad.
#196865 05/26/03 05:04 AM
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Labrat,

I may be a bit late here . I won't say I know a lot on antique, but I happen to know a little things on glassware and cristalware work.

How do your pieces look like? Plus other technical questions that may sound chinese to you but that might help like:

are they tainted, painted or coloured glass?

Do they have a certain shape?

Are they cristal or glass and if yes, can you tell: mouthblown, mechanical or industrial or handmade?

Are there any marks, symbols on it, or a specific shape, decoration, design?

things like that...But the best would be a pic. Anyway, if it's really urgent, you got my email, don't you?

Carole

#196866 05/26/03 05:15 AM
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Never too late, Cyad. The help is appreciated. Still waiting for Stuart to take pictures (the story of my life) but I'll gee him up and try posting them here later in the week if I can.

They're glass not crystal and clear glass but with gold patterned onto the glass. I'd say etched, but that's probably entirely the wrong technical term. Could be painted, I guess.

On the sherry goblets, the gold is worked in bands of differing thicknesses to the point where not much of the clear glass beneath shows on the goblet parts. Just very thin strips between the gold banding. I call them sherry goblets btw because that's all I can imagine them being, but that's just a guess. They're very small and delicate. Their stems are twisted into a spiral, with a round, flat base with a gold rim.

The creamer set - the jug is what I would call Grecian in style - tall and fluted rather than being dumpy like a milk jug. The sugar bowl is a large bowl with a thick round base. Both are 'etched' with gold in a very stylised leaf pattern - just a few strokes here and there to give the impression of branches and leaves. Clusters of berries are represented by groups of five red dots and these are slightly raised off the surface of the clear glass base.

No idea as to the method of manufacture, I'm afraid.

I don't think they're genuine antiques because I haven't ever been able to find any makers' marks on them and I've garnered from researching the sites others have helpfully provided that most antique glass does have makers' marks, just like silver.

Anyway, thanks for helping out - I'll try and get those pictures posted ASAP. smile

LabRat smile



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


The Musketeers
#196867 05/26/03 05:49 AM
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Story of my life (the sometimes late thingy, I mean wink )

Ok, again the ideal thing would be a pic (Just teasing you a bit, I'll wait patiently for you to post them or send them), the even better thing would be to be able to see them '3D', but a pic would do.

I have absolutely no clue so far (visual thingy again), though golden decorated items are making a come back....BTW, acid gold decorated or just applied gold? I mean, are there parts of the glassware where the gold have slightly disappeared? and do the gold part also stressed a decor shape?

Too bad you don't have a clue on a possible date of purchase, if not a manufacture one. Here I know such gold decorated "services" (with multiple pieces) where usually 1970's, but again, it could be 1847's, depends on the manufacturer (though the 1847 example applied to french luxuous brands...copies can exist but those are usually easily spottable)...here, the decor you describe seems rather modern except for the etched part.

And now I realise I made you re-write the entire description of your service (blamey, blamey, blamey).

For the method of manufacture, I'll make it simple, though it's not the only criteria:

Mouthblown: usually the base of the stem shows with the round mark of the 'stick' that the glass blower used,. can look like a default or as if the glass was a bit broken at the base, but it's not. But mouthblown it's a thing you 'see', like the rest...can't really explain it.

Mechanical: you see a thin discreet line, usually in the middle of the piece that shows like the two half part of the glass were 'glued' together.

Industrial: the piece is in one shape, and seems perfect, but usually the quality of the glass and the absence of mouthblown mark on the base tells you it's industrial and not mouthblown.

it's the coloured berries decor that strikes me here...I'll tell you if I come up with something more helpful.

Carole

PS: and catch Stuart!!! LOL smile1

#196868 05/27/03 11:43 PM
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hey again, Labrat!

ok, I still have no clue concerning your glass 'service' though it reminds me a lot of Bruce Jackson work.

Still, for my personnal culture, I found interesting paperweights (very Cristal Saint-Louis like) on william manson\'s website wink smile1

Carole

#196869 05/28/03 01:58 AM
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Interesting, Cyad. I tried a search for Bruce Jackson, but couldn't find any sites which had any clear examples of his work. Gilding though and the description of the process very much fits my glass, I think.

I'm getting a page not found on your link, can you check it again, please?

Oh, and I checked my pieces again and would definitely go for Industrial as the manufacture method. There are no seams and nothing like the 'imperfections' you mention.

LabRat smile (still waiting to catch Stuart for more than ten minutes - it's been one of those weeks.... :rolleyes: )



Athos: If you'd told us what you were doing, we might have been able to plan this properly.
Aramis: Yes, sorry.
Athos: No, no, by all means, let's keep things suicidal.


The Musketeers
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