Hi and welcome.

It certainly has the look of Moser, but there is quite a lot to unpack here with regard to your questions about colour.
The colours you are seeing other than red, I suspect are just the strange things glass does with colour. Colour in glass does not act like colour in paint.
The colour you see depends on the wavelength of the light hitting the back of your eyeball.
Red and green are kind of opposite colours on the wheel of the spectrum.
I can see from your photos that there is a green tinge on the surface of the rim. The green arises because you are seeing what light is being allowed through the "thickness" of the height of the vessel.
Because it is red glass and very densely red because of the thickness, a lot of the green light wavelengths are not able to enter the body, and get reflected off the surface. The same sorts of things are happening with your flashlight. You'll see green where the light you are using to shine on it goes through a lot of red bits.
Have you ever seen or heard of the Lycurgus Cup? A very famous ancient Roman masterpiece.
It shows the red/green colour change depending on whether the light is on the surface of the glass or coming through it. It has been discovered that it was achieved by a very specific and tiny concentration of colloidal gold particles, but the light and the colour things are based on the same principles. There are images of it here. It's in the British Museum.

The b*ggers won't give it to me and I want it.
https://www.amusingplanet.com/2016/12/lycurgus-cup-piece-of-ancient-roman.htmlI may not have explained this very well. Don't be afraid of more questions or of contradicting me.
This sort of stuff is physics.