I'm resurrecting this thread after many years it appears

It's still a question in my mind.
- I think I only have one more yellow piece (Non-uranium) than I had when I posted this originally- a satin glass vase fairly opaque, with clear satin glass handles - no idea where from. Looks like it could be LaFiori but I really don't know.
So five pieces in total. But it's a question that continues to vex me every so often - why is transparent yellow glass so difficult to find. True yellow, not coloured with uranium.
(In a similar vein, I also raised a question on a different thread about why red or ruby glass never seemed to appear in the spectrum of Sklo-Union glass. And yellow is another of those colours I think. Amber is there, yellow doesn't seem to be from memory.)
- Having re-decorated a room with a bright yellow velvet chair I find I'm dependent on my one yellow Schaumglas piece (from Loetz? or WMF?) for my display. I have the yellow Carlo Moretti satinato but that's elsewhere with the whole set. And I have one Aseda yellow vase, again needed elsewhere.
- The only other piece I have is what I
think is an Empoli shape.
It's a very large piece, a very good transparent bright yellow glass. Quite similar to the yellow of the Schaumglas vase actually . It's just a clear transparent yellow.
-Tonight out of curiosity I got it down from storage and checked it again with a blacklight and it glows with an immediate and fluorescent vivid bright orange - so I assume is coloured with Cadmium?
The Schaumglas vase does not glow orange, in fact it doesn't glow at all. The Aseda and the Moretti vases both glow a strong green but it doesn't quite look like a U green fluorescent green and they don't look like Uranium yellow glass in daylight either. They are also a bright yellow glass. The Moretti is opaline satinato. The Aseda is not really transparent like the 'Empoli' vase - difficult to explain.
- So, I was doing a bit of reading this evening and came across this information from 1895. It appears to be dated 15th March 1895 although I know from previous reading of these types of documentation that information can sometimes have originated from a much earlier date and just copied from year to year so it could be from earlier. In the particular section I mention it states at the end '
Specially translated from Diamant for the American Manufacturer . I have no idea what Diamant was.
See page 374 of the American Manufacturer and Iron World Pittsburgh 1895.
Under the heading
'American Manufacture. Glass. Yellow glass' :
The author discusses using silver chlorides to colour glass yellow. It says it is chiefly used for 'flashed work' and 'cannot be used for alkali-lime glass' and 'consequently used to colour the more fusible lead glass'.
Then the use of silver chromates.
Then the use of uranium and under uranium also mentions that a large quantity is necessary and it's very expensive and so was only used for the finest grade glass.
It then goes on to say: 'The latest material to come into use for coloring glass yellow is cadmium and it's compounds.' (See middle column for detailed information.)
From my reading it seems that not only was sulphide of cadmium difficult to use in the making, it also caused problems in the annealing process?
https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Steel_and_Iron/j7E4AQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=cadmium+in+yellow+glass&pg=PA374&printsec=frontcoverTo summarise ( and open to correction as I have no idea about glass chemistry and making )
It reads to me that uranium was expensive and could only be used in fine glass, cadmium could be difficult to control in the making and the annealing, and silver could not be used for alkali-lime glass and only for the more fusible lead glass.
Therefore I wonder if that's why it's still quite hard to find a good transparent yellow glass? Not amber. Not uranium yellow. Not cased or opaline. But a good clear transparent bright yellow glass?
m