Thanks for your thoughts.
Unfortunately, the actual glass is lost (sold "years ago", the op told me), so there is no way of knowng wear or uranium contents.
What made me react to the picture was first of all the pattern, the fact that we own a template (two, actually) with the same pattern.
ALthough we now have two pantographs we know very little of their origins (they do not have any makers marks): in literature we have found mentions of Reijmyre being the first Swe glassworks to get a pantograph "from France" in the 1880-ies; of Kosta buying an "etching machine" (pantograph?) "from England" in 1894, then "getting" a second one "from Germany" in 1907, and another one, possibly also from Germany, in 1910.
Pukeberg got one in 1926.
Elme produced pantographed glasses in the 1920ies.
There are no mentions at all about Åfors, except that they gifted a pantograph to Smålands Museum around 1970.
(an attempt to a time-line at
http://bergdala-glastekniska-museum.se/eng-ets-tidslinje.html )
Our, the museum's, first machine was used in Kosta, we know that.
It came to us with some 130 templates, most of which has patterns on both sides. We hope to create a database, but that will take time... so, in the meantime, we have two webpages showing some templates:
http://bergdala-glastekniska-museum.se/eng-london-baserade.html and
http://bergdala-glastekniska-museum.se/eng-sign-panto-plates.html (click for the whole template).
Of course we have tried to find out how (and where, and when...) the templates were made - we have had so many answers that we don't know where to begin - the only conclusions being "in many ways, by different ppl, maybe bought from outside".
So, back to the lost wine glass:
(seems I can't figure out how to add pictures - if they do not show, they are both at
https://bergdala-museum.blogspot.se/2018/03/ett-spannande-fynd-interesting-find.html and on the original place, see first post)
Question: IF the glass is not from Kosta - where does the template originate? Did machine manufacturers also offer standard templates? And again: who/where did manufacture pantographs...?
As for the stem: I know for a fact (glass blower told me) that at Johansfors they used to make twisted air stems as "yardage" to be cut and used as needed. Maybe that was done "everywhere"? (would perhaps agree with Paul's "massproduced"?)
So many questions - too little literature... unless you can point me to it?
thanks for helping,
Kerstin in Sweden