Tigerchips — This may surprise you, but I immediately thought of Sowerby and the two Manchester glassworks, Percival Vickers and Molineux & Webb. These were giant glassworks, each many times the size of the little tiddlers down south, and the three of them specialised in top quality cut tableware. Not death by a thousand cuts rubbish, but restrained elegant simple and accurate hand-polished cutting on top quality blanks.
Looking at it another way, I believe it was the dominance of these three glassworks that forced the southern glassworks to innovate into coloured and hand-made art glass. Had any of the southern glassworks concentrated on cut tableware, their inability to compete because of economies of scale would have bankrupted them.
Few pieces are positively attributable to a particular factory. However there are some that can be attributed without doubt. These are hybrids, where an attributable pressed glass blank was embellished by cutting. The three types of object where I have seen this are pickle jar lids, cruet bottles, and lampshade vases. I have in front of me a rare PV lampshade vase, pattern Rd No 168130 of 13 March 1891 (see Thompson p46). Instead of the rim being constricted and then flared to take a three-screw lampshade fitting, the rim has been left straight as it came out of the mould, and cut with lovely vertical oval windows, through each of which you can see the whole pattern of the other side of the vase in miniature. The star at the pointed end is also beautifully hand cut. The whole vase sits in its original EPNS ball and rod mount, which looks like a giant Hamilton (egg-ended) bottle stand. Close examination with a glass of the cutting on this piece reveals the very faint striations typical of the finest hand-polished work.
So, Tigerchips, I think your salt is almost certainly one of the big three.
... and watch out for Sowerby cut made from unpatterned pressed blanks that carry the peacock's head trade mark. I remember buying a lovely pair of cut Sowerby salts about five years ago, one Bank Holiday weekend when we had a stall on Tynemouth Station. I remember that weekend well, as, on the Sunday, I volunteered to sing "As Time Goes By" to a guitar accompaniment from the stairs. One minute the market was busy, then, when they heard me, everyone fled. I was only allowed back when I promised never to sing again!
Oh, and grateful thanks for the elegant thumbnail image links. I really enjoyed them. It is such a pleasure having the choice, and not having giant files rammed down the telephone wire on to my PC with no control from me. Beautiful. And the links are to .jpg files, not to pre-formatted web pages, so my browser can resize them to fit the available window. I hope more follow your excellent, well-mannered example. In fact I am feeling so cheerful I feel a song coming on, the only one I know:-
"You must remember this ...."
Bernard C.
