Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests > Glass Paperweights

Glass Eye USA - anyone recognise this design

(1/2) > >>

josordoni:
This is a lovely Glass Eye dichroic paperweight - I have gone through all the pics I can find of their dichroic weights, and can't find this one, it is dated 1985 so obviously quite an early one.

Does anyone recognise it?

thanks!

http://www.clarkagency.co.uk/clicpicjan/_local_glasseye.htm

glasstrufflehunter:
I have some egg shaped GES weights with that spatter up the sides. That's an irridized paperweight not dichroic. Dichro is rare elements vaporized in a vacuum and deposited on glass. Irridizing is done by applying a solution containing gold or silver usually to the surface, but sometimes I've seen it encased afterwards like in pieces by Eickholt.

Dichroic glass appears to change color when viewed from different angles. Irridized can look rainbowy but the colors do not move or change.

Glass Eye did make some dichroic pieces but this was after they started acid etching their signatures rather than scratch signing. I saw the first ones around 1995.

I have a lot of Glass Eye. It was the first studio I collected seriously until they started pricing as high as Scottish weights. At that point I felt like I got more bang for my buck with Perthshire.

Frank:
Dichroic glass is, properly, glass that changes colour based on transmitted or refelected light. It goes back to Romam times. It is unfortunate that in our modern age some glass suppliers have chosen to abuse the terminology and that this has been continued by their customers.

True dichroic glass is exquisite, the abominatons in its name are mostly just cute!

glasstrufflehunter:
A few months ago I saw an exhibit of Roman glass at the Getty Villa. Talk about exquisite!

josordoni:

--- Quote from: glasstrufflehunter on January 19, 2007, 09:29:04 PM ---I have some egg shaped GES weights with that spatter up the sides. That's an irridized paperweight not dichroic. Dichro is rare elements vaporized in a vacuum and deposited on glass. Irridizing is done by applying a solution containing gold or silver usually to the surface, but sometimes I've seen it encased afterwards like in pieces by Eickholt.

Dichroic glass appears to change color when viewed from different angles. Irridized can look rainbowy but the colors do not move or change.

Glass Eye did make some dichroic pieces but this was after they started acid etching their signatures rather than scratch signing. I saw the first ones around 1995.

I have a lot of Glass Eye. It was the first studio I collected seriously until they started pricing as high as Scottish weights. At that point I felt like I got more bang for my buck with Perthshire.

--- End quote ---

Ah, the colours did seem to change as I moved it, so I assumed (wrongly it would seem) that it was dichroic.... thanks for putting me right. If they didn't make Dichroic until 1995, then this isn't it...

Is dichroic always as bright and vivid as the jewellry I have seen?

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

Go to full version