Carolyn - That's great! I've wondered for a long time who did that etch. Never woulda guessed it was Bohemia.
Adam - how exciting to see someone currently using copper wheel! I've looked at her work before, admire it greatly, but didn't know she used copper. I see in her biography that they are no longer teaching it in UK schools, which I reckon is part of the reason it has become so uncommon there and elsewhere.
I was familiar with some of Harcuba's work, but that's an excellent site! Shows lots of it, and gives a nice detailed biography. Thanks for posting it.
Ken -
As for sandblast examples...the only ones I have are Tiffin & to be honest they are more of a cutting technique than what we normally consider etching so maybe they were not the best examples to use.
The folder I was talking about is for all (cold?) surface decoration techniques, not just etching. Some people call it etching; as a person who tends to make nice, narrowly defined pigeon-holes for terms (something I'm trying to get past!), I tend to agree with you. In any case, it's distinct from the acid etching Carolyn was asking about.
As for engravers I'd put the various crews in Corning from the hand shops of Steuben, Sinclaire, Hoare, Hawkes, etc., & most of the engravers who were largely either Bohemian or French up against anybody, but thats just me.
I agree and disagree. There were certainly very talented individuals working in Corning, but I think the skill among those in the crews varied quite a bit. I also think it's important to consider that the designs were tailored to the engraving of which they were capable. Perhaps there were people in Corning who could have engraved Dominic Bieman's portraits or Woodall's Moorish Bathers, I don't know. And maybe someone was capable of engraving my stem, they were just never called upon to do it. I've spent many hundreds of hours looking at photos of Corning engraving, and I've never seen anything quite as delicate. There are hundreds of individual cuts on it that are about a mm long, made with the finest of copper wheels.
Maybe I'm making more of my new stem than it deserves, I don't know.
Here's a nice example of a Corning piece in the Renaissance style (on the right). On the one on the left you can see some nice, tight, curves, but nothing like the ones on
my glass!

Below that are a couple photos of George Woodall's Moorish Bathers, for those who haven't had the pleasure of seeing it. One of my favorite pieces of all time.