Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests > Glass
New vase - don't even know what to call the technique
cubby01:
All I know is my wife brought it home from an estate sale caked with crud. It cleaned up well and we don' think it's recently made.
What would you call the technique? Any leads on the maker?
chopin-liszt:
WMF, Ikora, I think.
Does it have an iridescent finish? I'm not quite so positive WMF used that.
The technique of producing that broken sort of effect has several names, I believe an official one is "primavera".
It is produced by dunking the hot, semi-blown gather into cold water, which cools rapidly and cracks all over the surface. It is then re-heated and reblown to stretch out the crackled effect.
It was used by WMF in their Ikora glassware range, by Monart for the Cloissonne range and in Mdina by Michael Harris to create their "crizzle" effect and Isle of Wight Studio Glass, where it is also called crizzle.
cubby01:
Thanks Sue! I'll look deeper with those ideas.
It does have an iridescent finish.
-Buck
dirk.:
Hi Buck and Sue!
I´m quite sure it´s not an Ikora piece. Any structures wether produced by dipping into solutions of metallic
salts or by moulding or / and dipping into powders would have been cased afterwards. Ikora pieces also have
a hot-formed rim (except the lamp-bases of course).
chopin-liszt:
>:D
Perhaps it was the burying of it in all the crud for a long time which caused the iridescence??????????
(That's how Roman and other really, really old glass gets it's finish, but I don't know how long it actually takes. WMF Ikora is Art Deco period.)
I'm sure you know a lot more than I do about WMF Dirk. I did have a little doubt. :-[
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