Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. > Murano & Italy Glass
Found - Green Decanter (?) + Glasses marked ITALY - ID = Bormioli
ChrisP:
Found this in the back of cupboard with six glasses. Can any one tell the maker by this mark. Thanks Chris
Paul S.:
Hello Chris - welcome to the GMB :) - the short answer is no, I've not a clue as to an attribution, age or origin - sorry.
It appears that this is a decanter - think I'm seeing a stopper - am I correct? Unfortunately, I can't really make out what the moulded marks or whatever, on the underside, are supposed to be - are you able to clarify, please - are they letters or Nos. possibly.
It's always possible that these marks will simply be a factory code, production No., or a makers mark of some description, but insufficient for us to decode the maker.
It may or may not help the more knowledgeable here, but your subject heading tells us nothing about this item - out of interest a few words as to the size and perceived use, plus a very brief description, would possibly be of interest - we don't charge, even for quite a few extra words ;)
Are you suggesting that you consider the glasses might possibly form some sort of 'set' and belong to this bottle, or am I reading too much into your words?
Presumably this isn't something you have acquired - so bought or acquired by a family member perhaps.
Sorry to be negative on your first outing with the GMB - but as you can imagine the world is knee deep in glass in a zillion different shapes, sizes and colours, and whilst we do our best, we don't always succeed.
you might add pix of the stopper - assuming this is a decanter, and an idea of height of the whole bottle, will be of interest. :)
ChrisP:
the decanter has no stopper. 23cm High, 12cm Diameter. Looking on the base of the tumblers they are marked ITALY. Thanks for your interest believe they were my mothers, the paper wrapping them is dated 1985, so must be over 35 years.
Paul S.:
thanks Chris - obviously I need Specsavers, again. Some bottles, made specifically to be used without a stopper, are designated carafes - they would have been intended for use, with wine presumably, for a single sitting/meal - then washed and re-used in a similar fashion for a subsequent meal. On the other hand decanters, with stoppers, are used as you will know, for storing wine, sherry, port or other spirits, and where there is an intention to store the liquid and where consumption might be over a lengthy period.
Sometimes it's possible to detect wear in the neck of the bottle - this can suggest there was a stopper once, though now perhaps lost, but a lack of wear might confirm this one was intended as a carafe.
That's not to say this one is definitely a carafe, it may be a decanter and simply lost it's stopper - a fate that befalls many similar items.
The glasses appear to be tumblers rather than something you might drink wine from - perhaps this bottle was simply for water, at the meal table, though whether the glasses and bottle started life together we may never know, but the colour is certainly a good match.
Italian second half C20 glass not my scene, but I'm aware from what folk here discuss that that Italian glass from that period is often of a strong colour, and green has been traditional for glass for a very long time. added ……...….... the name Blenko comes to mind, much colourful glass and certainly the period that might cover the piece here. Could be worth checking if only to eliminate.
Hopefully, someone might yet have the answer you want - fingers crossed.
KevinH:
Hi ChrisP, welcome to the Board. I have tweaked your thread title - hopefully it will attract some more viewers.
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