Glass Message Board
Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests => Glass => Topic started by: Anne E.B. on January 12, 2008, 02:19:13 PM
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http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y195/glassie/Daum001.jpg
Just bought this elegant but simple Daum decanter with its original label and signed near the base - Daum - France along with the initials C B. The initials also are marked on the base of the stopper.
Can anyone tell me anything about it please? Why it is marked C B and who C B is :huh:
I've checked Ivo's A-Z 8) and have found that it can be dated from 1945 to 1975 because of the way it is marked, but can't find mention of anyone with the initials CB.
TIA ;)
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It is just a guess on this, but handcrafted vessels with a stopper often have a code under the vessel base and the stopper, which is needed for the packers in the factory, so that they know that both are belonging to each other. The stopper is often refined by carving and polishing to fit exactly into the decanter's body, so that it fits tight without easily getting stuck in there on the other hand. I don't know too much about postwar Daum, but if they hired Designers in the post war period, those were mostly quite celebrated artists, designing small editions that are extensively signed, dated and limited. Your decanter looks more like the "simple" factory designed luxury tableware from the fifties or sixties. Like I wrote before, this is just a guess though.
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Thank you for replying Joschua :). I've only seen decanters marked with numbers before, not letters, and I just assumed that they were initials belonging to someone.