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Hi. It is a typical early Chinese piece. Evangeline Bergstrom records acquriring a couple around 1937, and a very similar one is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, being donated in 1930 - and presumably not a brand new piece then. I am writing an article about these, which will be in the next PCC Newsletter.
Below is an image of a few from our collection.
Regarding Clichy paperweights, colour grounds are quite rare. The commonest Clichy paperweights are probably miniature / small spaced concentrics in clear glass, often with a rose cane and or edelweiss canes, and other millefiori canes of higher quality than the Chinese ones. The domes are higher than the Chinese, and they are made of lead glass, rather than soda-lime glass.
Alan