Re Thomas Webb's two registrations of 14 November 1883:-
Thompson, in her supplement, p.31, refers to them as
a pear shape and an apple shape.
Gulliver, p.271, refers to them as
Design for a paperweight in the shape of an apple/pear with a stalk trail.
I have a pear in front of me. It's in lightly optic 12-ribbed flint with a canary (uranium yellow) trail. The registration lozenge is neatly engraved on the base. The three spots in Gulliver's drawings are holes. And they are wasp or fly traps, with the trail forming a hanging loop. I imagine that few have survived. Mine is pretty well knackered, with the end of the trail missing, two cracks at one of the holes, and some limescale damage, but it was beautifully made. This could well be one of those designs that started out as a frigger and subsequently went into production.
So, mystery solved. Don't forget to pencil a note in the margins of your copies of Gulliver and the Thompson supplement. Note that Gulliver has the two registrations muddled — I can't resolve that.
Bernard C.
