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Chance Brothers information

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vidrioguapo:
Thanks Sue.  Yes, this one is a "cut above" the usual handkerchief vases, but it's the intaglio pattern I'm most keen to know about. ... to try and find out if it is one of the designs by Geoffrey Baxter before he went to Whitefriars.I think it is possibly not as it is a bit too "classic" for his style, but..you never know!!

Max:
I saw this on the WF.com board...I think it's fascinating - I'd love to see it in the flesh.   :)

chopin-liszt:
:D
Miller's Collectables 2005 (p.306) shows an intaglio cut handkerchief vase, ruby flashed, horizontal cuts, 7" tall, describing it as rare and '60's. It is priced at £120-140, compared to ordinary vases that size priced, for a '50's one with red spots, £70-80; for an orange stripey '60's one, £80-90.
These do not ever seem to reach the heady heights of the prices quoted by Miller.

David E:
Sue, I think the Miller's prices can be taken with a pinch of salt, but this would explain why the prices for them have been so high recently – I sold a white one a few weeks ago with slight nibble on the rim for £22, whereas they were previously £5-10.

But like many collectable pieces, these can also be subject to trends; I remember watching the Murano end-of-day fishes suddenly reaching stupid prices (£70 upwards) last year, before they went back lower than the market price had been previously dictating. Even now they can picked up for less than £10. I think this wild fluctuation was entirely due to a single TV programme pricing them up...

These trends also seem to be far more shorter-lived (often just a matter of months) now that eBay dominates the market.

Regarding the 'intaglio' effect, I would have thought all the patterned ones could be called this couldn't they, due to the process used?

chopin-liszt:
:D
Hello David, The intaglio ones are actually cut, through a layer of coloured glass to the clear. The other ones are transfer printed. They're quite, quite different. :D
I was just using Miller to give an example of a comparison of the intaglio and the transfer printed ones, as it was the only place I could find one. It did give dates, though. The intaglio piece they show is stated to be '60's, while some transfer printed ones are described as '50's.

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