http://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,54884.msg311028.html#msg311028Knowing nothing about how glass is made apart from the very little I've gleaned and understood from my books, I'm very curious as to a) how this bowl was made.
b) why it has a strange pontil scar or mark consisting of 6 small blobs, rather than a round polished mark or a smooth snapped off scar etc, i.e. I own a lot of glass, but none which has this type of pontil mark.
I've looked at hundreds of images now but because people often don't put base images on I've only managed to find a few that actually show the pontil mark like this (actually all Italian)
For example, not withstanding the fact that I don't think??? the colour of my bowl is right for Steuben nor the mark on the base, those I've found on real life photos at the Steuben pattern site, made at Steuben, are different because they have a polished pontil mark and on most of them (one exception I've found being a later version with handles) the lattice is started at the foot very differently. On those a trail has been laid around the rim of the foot and then rather than being pulled up once into a triangle shape, it is pinched and slightly pulled forming a 'raised blob' for the next layer of trailed glass to sit on. Only then is the next layer pulled into a triangle (the exception being a later bowl featured that seems to have been done in the same way as my bowl).
Looking at a past thread featuring some pieces with this design of lattice glass, Peter shows a very old bowl and plate with a lattice design and says:
'..
. In the Glass In The Rijksmuseum' catalogue they are described as 'open work mesh pattern',made of smooth threads nipped into an open work mesh. and in their day in the 18thc they were very expensive items,the open mesh work being entirely hand worked and time consuming.'
My green bowl isn't done in exactly the same way as Peter's but it must have been difficult to make, to keep the glass soft enough to work without reheating and losing the shape, and it's large at 10" diameter.
The fact that the base of my bowl reminded me of a bulls eye window pane, i.e. doesn't look as though it was blown into a mould to make the base, but looks as though it was hand-formed with the wreathing in the glass etc got me wondering about the pontil scar/mark. Is it in fact a pontil scar with a smooth middle and nipple in the middle, or is it where a 'gadget' has held the glass for it to be worked?
So it is possible my bowl was constructed as follows (edited ):
For the base
- first blowing a large bubble,
- Attach gadget to bottom of bubble, then cutting it off at the rod, opening out the bubble at the cut off end and flattening out the bubble into a disc shape, thereby leaving the circular wreathing and what was the end of the bubble as a smooth nipple in the centre underneath with gadget attached around it, but then leaving a cut rim.
- firepolish the rim of the disc whilst held on the gadget, and trail hot glass around the rim to make the foot of the sides of the basket.
-Then using the gadget to hold the opened disc, trail hot glass around the first circle of glass and pull into triangle loops all the way round,
- Trail another flat circle of glass around the tips of the triangles and use pincers to pinch together , then pull the flat bits inbetween into triangle shapes...etc. etc. for each layer finishing with a final flat layer of trailed glass for the rim
Question 1) Does that method make sense?
Question 2) If this was how it was made, then might the pontil scar actually be a gadget mark rather than where it came off the blowpipe?
Question 3) Is that method going to require slow cooling glass, or glass that remains pliable for lengthy periods in order to do all that work?
Question 4) In which case, could that fact along with the gadget scar indicate which country?
Question 5) Surely that kind of work is going to mean someone with a lot of skill making the basket.
Question 6) Would this kind of work been more prone to failure because of the fragility, length of time to make, annealing process?
Thanks for reading

m