Glass Message Board

Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. => USA => Topic started by: oyemicanto on August 20, 2010, 06:49:12 PM

Title: Extra large console bowl + amazing design uranium green glass - ID = Cambridge
Post by: oyemicanto on August 20, 2010, 06:49:12 PM
Hello everyone again
I have just aquired this bowl today it is absolutely huge I have never had a bowl this big before!
It is in a lovely uranium green glass the underside is frosted while the surface is satin.It is decorated with a stylised scene of native Americans hunting buffalo while on horseback.
Any ideas please?
Many thanks in advance!
Nige
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Lustrousstone on August 20, 2010, 07:09:00 PM
Cambridge Glass 1339 Everglades Buffalo Hunt Scene

Mod: Links to clicksnipwow removed as site is no longer connected to glass. Please visit http://chataboutdg.com/forums/ and use the search function instead

Frosted is satin; I think you mean shiny. How huge? 14 inches? The Walther Seerose comes close at 13 inches

Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: oyemicanto on August 20, 2010, 07:47:12 PM
Hi Christine
I have measured the bowl from end to end and it is more like 16inches!
Yes frosted/satin Shiny on top.Thankyou very much for the info link I would love that colour aswell!
One of the nicest bowls I have seen!
Nige
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Ohio on August 20, 2010, 09:48:15 PM
Well congrats Nige thats quite a find. The 16" Cambridge Everglade Buffalo Scene bowl consistantly sells for $275+  here in the US & they are very hard to find.  The one in the URL was mine. Ken
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: oyemicanto on August 21, 2010, 07:40:30 AM
Hi Ken
Thanks for that! The amber is lovely or cinnamon as it is called in the link.
Got mine for a bargain price of £19.99 I was the only bidder!
I have also just purchased a part clear part frosted bowl made by Reich with the feet as elves/boys for £5!!!
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Anne on August 21, 2010, 11:46:52 AM
Lucky man!  :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: Love the buffalo bowl Nige!
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: jsmeasell on August 23, 2010, 07:32:09 PM
Very nice item. Imperial made a few of these in milk glass in the 1950s or 60s in the shape just as it comes from the mould ... about the size of medium punch bowl. The mould went to Summit Art Glass in the mid-1980s when Imperial closed, and they made a few in opaque brown Chocolate glass. Now that Summit has closed, the mould might be owned by Mosser and/or Rosso Wholesale Glass.

Fenton owns a few of the original Everglades moulds, but not this one. And, don't ask what a Buffalo is doing in the Everglades!
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Ohio on August 23, 2010, 10:15:52 PM
James all Cambridge molds, every single one of them Summit still owned are now in the possession of the National Cambridge Collectors. No one else has any of the Summit Cambridge molds Russ owned up until his unfortunate passing. We've had them for a year & a half now. Matter of fact they were just inventoried & placed in an NCC secured storage building. Summit made those five prototype flying lady bowls & I (personal opinion) believe that threw a scare into the organization so after 6 months of negotiations they were all purchased to make certain there would be no reproductions from overseas. Ken  
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Paul S. on August 24, 2010, 10:54:19 AM
Would add my congratulations also to Nige - lovely bowl and a good price :)       Also very heartwarming to hear the comments from Ken, with respect to placing some of these older moulds out of reach of replicators.   It is the scourge of genuine collectors and authors when older patterns are reproduced and sold in the market place, often as originals.    Aside from the deception from a monetary point of view, there is the far more important aspect that genuine original production figures become permanently muddled, and leads to confusion all round, especially in the literature.    Whilst no expert on the over-use of period moulds, it is a fact that when used for too long the end results lose the sharpness and appeal of originals.   Unfortunately, it seems that wherever there is a demand, there is someone ready to cash in on the needs of a collector. 
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: oyemicanto on August 24, 2010, 11:04:57 AM
Here here Paul! You are so right in what you say!
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Lustrousstone on August 24, 2010, 11:29:51 AM
You are looking at this from a very narrow viewpoint. Unless there is intent to deceive, it's a perfectly legitimate way to do business and something that has happened since the beginning of pressed glass (reread Slack). Moulds have been sold from company to company; and companies have reused their own moulds years after the first production run stopped. Why should the greater buying public not enjoy the designs of the past and businesses reap the benefits? Most of these items are not sold as collectibles; they are sold as decorative or functional items. Unfortunately, there are more non-collectors than collectors. It happens in all areas of life; should we ban miniskirts or lava lamps to protect the vintage clothing or lamp collectors? What about reproduction furniture or the "17th and 18th century" glasses made in the 19th and 20th centuries? Some of the older stuff now has value in it's own right.

I'm afraid we just have to put up with it.
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: oyemicanto on August 24, 2010, 01:14:18 PM
I just find it cheapens the whole thing and lets face it the detailing is not as good as the original glass.
You do pay for quality at the end of the day.
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Paul S. on August 24, 2010, 01:42:21 PM
quote from Lustrousstone today.....'should we ban miniskirts'.....certainly not ;)........and you are correct insofar as I am looking at it from the viewpoint of a seasoned collector.   It is perhaps a debatable point......but I would maintain that there is a very real reason to value the genuine period article.  It's what makes real history, makes people pay a king's ransom for the 'Sunflowers' - and gives the very soul to genuine antiques.    Of course, if something is very obviously a 'repro', then no problem - but items like carnival glass from the original moulds is more often than not sold to deceive.     I know people will call me a snob, but the non collector doesn't probably deserve the real thing, if only because they take no interest in its intrinsic value or history.   Therefore they forfeit the right to having the genuine article. :wsh: 
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Lustrousstone on August 24, 2010, 02:29:36 PM
Excuse me, you can only have the "real thing" because an ordinary non-collector consumer popped down to the local glass and china emporium and bought a thingy to decorate the whatsit. Sunflowers is also a bad example, because it wasn't a one-off. Vincent was trying to make a buck doing something he loved.

Quote
but items like carnival glass from the original moulds is more often than not sold to deceive
That statement could get you in trouble!

I too very much appreciate the real thing; that's not my point.  Should I send my 70+ year-old 1930s uranium Sowerby diving Dolphins bowl back because it reused a mould from 1882?

Quality doesn't always suffer; moulds can be retooled and, in this day and age, easily recreated. Businesses can't sell what the public doesn't want.
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: chopin-liszt on August 24, 2010, 03:29:10 PM
Well said, Christine. I have to agree with you.  :-*

But then, I don't collect pressed glass, or prints of paintings, or any "limited edition" reproductions of things.
If I did want a "drunken bricklayer" vase (which I really don't) I'd personally prefer to pay less for a cheaper modern "copy" than an "original" - given the originals are all just copies anyway.  >:D
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Paul S. on August 24, 2010, 03:29:59 PM
'but items like carnival glass from the original moulds is more often than not sold to deceive'  -  I will clarify that comment for the benefit of anyone whom I may have confused..........in that -  if there is the intention to imply that a piece is period, when it has been produced in modern times, then that is deception - whether it comes from the original mould or not.    Most non collectors that I know, understandably believe that carnival glass was something that originated in the early C20 and petered out perhaps somewhere in the middle of the C20.     You and I know differently, of course.    Auction houses the world over make their living form selling things which, if made yesterday, would have but a fraction of the value that they do in fact realize - we value enormously the very fact that something is period. :)
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: chopin-liszt on August 24, 2010, 04:30:09 PM

Personally, I value the artistic creation of a piece regardless of period.

But in general, here are some periods I like better than others.
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Ohio on August 25, 2010, 06:03:50 AM
I generally do agree with the statement " Unless there is intent to deceive, it's a perfectly legitimate way to do business", I have never had a problem with the vast majority of repros that originally did not represent subtantial value (run of the mill pieces). I would add that it all depends on whom has the mold & the piece derived from the mold placed in production. Unfortunate there are numerous cases involving certain molds (I'll use a Cambridge piece as an example) whereby they are placed in production to deceive simply because the piece is of subtantial value & this applies to many molds from many manufacturers when a piece exhibits subtantial value that has nothing to do with an item being produced for functional or decorative value. Fenton for instance has owned a number of Cambridge molds for years & they have always taken measures either by mold modification, a signature added or producing the item in a non-Cambridge color...perfect example of Christine's statement. Now lets take the Cambridge #40 Flying Lady Bowl. I've attached a pic of mine in Crown Tuscan which is the most common color & frankly in this color they are not of subtantial value (excluding the Rockwell silver overlay Seahorse decoration in CT), however in colors other than CT its an entirely different situation where the prices realized run the gauntlet from $2,500 to $5,000 USD. The primary reason NCC went after all these molds was quite simple...we could not gamble that a company such as Fenton would end up purchasing the molds. I won't go into unnecessary detail, however the only thing over the decades that stymied the reproduction of the #40 was the foot of the piece which required specialized training to make & that stood the test ot time for 40 years until 2005 when Summit produced five amethyst prototypes & sold them on eBay, however Summit did make it very clear that these were decorative reproductions. Summit   did produce the molded tops in various colors from time to time, however they never made the foot, but still the sales of the tops encouraged individuals to try their hand at reproducing the foot to complete the piece. Fortunately to  the best of everyone's knowledge no one ever suceeded. Unfortunatelty its not a perfect world when it comes to old molds being purchased by who knows who or where?    Ken
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: mhgcgolfclub on October 05, 2012, 04:58:45 AM
Hi Nige

I found one of these bowls this week also 16" pale blue frosted underside.

Roy
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: Ohio on October 05, 2012, 05:39:27 AM
Well Roy at times you find better Cambridge than we do in the states. Looks like the #1126 flat turned up edge 16" Everglade Buffalo bowl in Willow Blue was was introduced in the Spring of 1929.  Lady in our local NCC club has the twin to yours. Nice find to say the least. Ken
Title: Re: Extra large console bowl with amazing design uranium green glass
Post by: mhgcgolfclub on February 18, 2014, 10:13:53 PM
Today found this one a peach colour with the underside frosted.

Roy