Thanks

yes I can see that the 'divider' moorish style grid lines are thicker on the one in the lithograph,
but ... if I look at the print of the lithograph in the Harrach book I believe that the ochre pattern inside the grid lines actually has a darker orangey intricate colour pattern on it as well - it just doesn't show up in the lithograph reprint. I think the colours are the 'reverse' colours of the one in the Hermitage.
The link I am trying to make is to understand whether the vase on the left of my composite photo below is definitely Russian. It is identified in the Hermitage as Russian. (excuse quality of composite but it was the only way to try and get the designs to show up)
The vase in the middle of my composite was part of a display from Wilhelm Hoffman at the Great Exhibition 1862. I think it is the same basic shape and construction (albeit foot applied slightly further up the body and therefore a slightly wider merese/knop where the foot joins the body) as the vase on the left of the composite which is in the Hermitage collection.
The vase on the right of composite is also in the Hermitage collection id'd as Russian. I think it is similar to the vase in the middle in that it has that ridge and has the same or very similar design decor throughout.
All good so far then ...
if all my observations/musings are actually correct, then it all ties together nicely yes? They are Russian.
Well not quite -
I have another vase that has similarities with the decor of the vase on the left (the Etruscan Hermitage vase) and is also uranium base glass as that vase is.
I would love it to be Russian and, on first glance, the vase on the left along with another piece in the museum could support this although there are no
exact similarities in either decoration or shape.
However:
I
have matched the shape of my vase with another vase in a Bohemian Glass book. The other vase is unidentified except for 'Norbohmen'(North Bohemian).
On first glance the decor of the other vase 'could' be Russian. However, I have searched extensively and I am not convinced, because I cannot match either the shape (which doesn't 'feel' Russian at all) or any of the decor features (it has two or three specific types of decoration on it, some are gilded).
So, I am now wondering would the Wilhelm Hofmann Company have been displaying vases from the Imperial Glass Manufactory at the Great Exhibition in 1862, or is that unlikely? if unlikely then it
might be possible that both those vases in the Hermitage are incorrectly identified as Russian when they
might be Bohemian.
If they are Bohemian then that would tie in slightly with my vase and the vase in the book.
On the other hand, I've not been able to match either my vase shape or those in the composite with anything Bohemian either

Sorry - long explanation.
m