Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. > Malta Glass

Mdina axehead vase. New or Vintage?

<< < (5/7) > >>

chopin-liszt:
 ;D ;D ;D

Please Miss, I know, I know!

Mark Hill is the gentleman who has been both writing for Miller's DK Collectables Price Guides, AND collecting and researching Harris dynasty glass. He thinks he might have been responsible for the axe thing.
Initially, Mdina did get into Miller's DK Collectables Price Guides, but before anybody really knew anything about it. Interest in it has been steadily growing, and folk have been trying to find out about it!
It was stuff that came from Malta.
A lot of it was unmarked.

You'll see in later Miller's DK Collectables Price Guides that the information is correct.

Until recently, there has been little or no information about Michael Harris, Mdina and everything else to do with him. It is only recently that Mark has been working with the Harris family in order to produce his fantastic and definitive book on Michael Harris. I really recommend it.

I think what Pip describes is absolutely the best way to deal with it. Get the wrong name into the listing by SAYING it's the wrong name.  ;D

You'll see, also, that the efforts of Marcus have paid off too, in getting the misnomer of Royal Bohemia removed from Miller's DK Collectables Price Guides, and correct attributions are now available.  Miller's DK Collectables Price Guides are GUIDES.

MarkHill:
Thanks Sue!
Yes, I admit I was the first to put 'Axehead' in print - partly as that is what seemed to be the general name at the time. I am sorry - I didn't know any better then, but I do now. I guess that is what 'learning' is about - this market was very young then, with tantamount to no real coverage. So, they ARE 'Fish' as that was what Michael Harris intended them to be called! As Sue also correctly says, this a later shape (more squared off) and colourway.
Also, could I be just a little pedantic and say that these listings (Mdina/IOW & Sklo Union) appear in the "DK Collectables Price Guides" by Judith Miller and published by Dorling Kindersley, for which I am co-author. I know it's common parlance to call us all 'Miller's', but we have nothing at all to do with 'Miller's', which is actually another book published by another company!
Thanks,
Mark
www.markhillpublishing.com
www.dk.com/judithmiller

chopin-liszt:
 :o

I've just bought the new guide, I had to go and check what it's called.
I checked last year's too.
No, it's NOT called "Miller's" any more!

 ::)Something else to get into the public conciousness.

Sue C:
Hi Mark, i have the D.K guide book on 20th cen glass, and i love it, congadulations on a super article in Collect It about Mdina.
How would you like people to differentciate between Miller's guide book's, and Judith's and your book's? as MIller's guide book's and then as D.K. Collectable guide's ? some people do get confused, and it should clear thing's up a bit when people state where they got their information from, and also detach you from the Millers guide's.
                                                                                   Sue

chopin-liszt:
 ???

I need to be a little more pedantic rigorous myself, Mark! Apologies for implying that you "invented" the axe thing, as you point out, it seemed to be a descriptive term folk used for these pieces of glass before we knew better, so that was why it ended up in print.

When things are still being researched, endeavours for truth will always, like science, only be to the best standards possible, given the information and knowledge available at the time.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

Go to full version