Glass Message Board
Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. => Murano & Italy Glass => Topic started by: antiquerose123 on February 07, 2008, 04:58:14 AM
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Got this too with a label. Any info at all, age/label....good, or bad. Thanks.
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This is a very new one. These types can be found in TJ Maxx, and similar outlets.
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This is a very new one. These types can be found in TJ Maxx, and similar outlets.
Okey dokey....I never knew that, and have never shopped there....No stores here where I am.
Is this label in the gallery? Or even wanted then?
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Thank you for thinking of the label Shannon, but we do already have that one:
http://glassgallery.yobunny.org.uk/displayimage.php?pos=-3034 :)
Keep looking for them though, it all helps!
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This is a very new one. These types can be found in TJ Maxx, and similar outlets.
Okey dokey....I never knew that, and have never shopped there....No stores here where I am.
Think Winners, A.R. That's the Canadian equivalent.
Carolyn
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Do you Ross or Marshall's in Canada? Those are the other similar stores here in the US.
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Just a note about your piece, antiquerose. When you see a bottom finished like this (roughly ground without polishing) it's usually an indication of poor quality, and often those items are from China. Of course Chinese glass can also be found with a polished bottom, or sometimes ground finer, but still matte. I would say that in general, when you find a Murano piece with a bottom like this, it is recent and not the best quality (or it's a fake). Of course, as with almost every subject concerning glass, there are no hard and fast rules. :P I have seen nice, authentic, mid century Murano glass pieces with roughly ground bottoms, but those cases have been clowns or animal figurines.
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hi, Thanks. I have never shopped at Winners, Ross, or Marshall -- yet much heard of them. I kinda wondered about this, but because it had a label, I still thought I would get it.
Hey -- Some days are good, some days are bad.....That's life.
It would be (kinda) nice if we could have a section on *bottoms* ( lol....glass bottoms :spls2:) to show any variation of different bottoms. Maybe this could be added to the gallery? I have read that Murano glass bottoms are well quality, BUT then I have also read that they are rough, have ash in the....and sometimes a little more than imperfect.
Also the older style of bases (if they have one), older style of bottoms, bottoms unpolished, ground, matted, rougher bottoms (clowns or animals).....or any that are rare. Kinda like the label section.
It is just a suggestion, but for the novice (and others)...it might be useful. Any knowledge is good knowledge :)
* Right now I'm trying to figure out a signature on another one, before i post it...
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Antiquerose said:
It would be (kinda) nice if we could have a section on *bottoms*
Although that's an interesting idea, in practice it would be tricky. As Shandiane intimated, there's no hard and fast rules with bases really, and it comes down to experience and sometimes hunches, if not learning. In fact, unless you can recognise a particular design and relate it directly to a designer, there's no hard and fast rules with many aspects of glass. You have to draw from a variety of values to make a decision about where a piece comes from, and the base is only part of that decision anyway.
My advice would be, avoid anything with clowns on for the moment, and don't be swayed by the fact a piece has a 'murano' label on it. Looking for wear on the base is one easy way of telling the approximate age of a piece...assuming someone hasn't been tampering with it with sandpaper... ;)
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Or rubbing it along the concrete, Max >:D LOL! ;)
Is it just me, or do the 'striations' on the base of this pink dish look very similar to the base of a certain little hound dog? http://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,18888.0.html
heh
(Sorry! :-[ >:D ;))
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Leni said
Or rubbing it along the concrete, Max Evil LOL! Wink
(http://www.clicksmilies.com/s1106/sprachlos/speechless-smiley-004.gif) :-[ ;D
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...
Is it just me, or do the 'striations' on the base of this pink dish look very similar to the base of a certain little hound dog? http://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,18888.0.html
heh
(Sorry! :-[ >:D ;))
You were reading my mind, Leni. Must be resin. ::)
Anita
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Baaaad girls! >:D
But you are right, that really does show the same effect doesn't it? Yet we know that Rose's bowl *is* glass, so that debunks the resin theory. 8)