Glass Message Board

Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests => Glass => Topic started by: Leni on June 10, 2008, 08:31:33 AM

Title: Jubilee jug
Post by: Leni on June 10, 2008, 08:31:33 AM
This little amber jug is just 3 inches high (7.5cm) and has a nice round polished out pontil mark.   Any idea of the maker?
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Lustrousstone on June 10, 2008, 09:38:47 AM
It wouldn't surprise me if it was Krosno. The slightly orangey amber, the clear handle and the polished pontil remind me of a labelled jug and a boxed jug and glass set (apparently bought in M&S 40 years ago) I have.
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Ivo on June 10, 2008, 12:23:52 PM
it would  hugely surprise me if it were Krosno.
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Lustrousstone on June 10, 2008, 12:29:23 PM
Why?
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: aa on June 10, 2008, 12:56:00 PM
Looks very much like the jugs that Jaffe Rose used to import in the seventies. If it were, it could be that the engraving, which looks like sandblasting, could have been down at a different location from the origin.
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Ivo on June 10, 2008, 02:51:18 PM
I'm not convinced that a decorator in 1977 would buy a pallet of blank jugs in Poland - when there is not only a domestic industry, but also Italy and Portugal as likely suppliers.
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: johnphilip on June 10, 2008, 03:10:34 PM
Hi Leni are you sure its not W/Fs over the years they made a lot of jugs and i have seen so many different ambers and shapes,they and other companies used the blanks for engraving ie Watford cristal, there was a thread on W/Fs . com about bowls without bubbles i asked Ray he said they did most bowls with or without bubbles in case they or someone else wanted the plain ones for engraving like my ROAB bowl,engraving bubble glass can be difficult and costly.
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Frank on June 10, 2008, 03:14:44 PM
Jaffe Rose imported from Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Italy (table glass). Never list Poland. A lot of the decorators were importing blanks because they were cheaper. Pirelli used a mix of mostly French & British. Jules Lang imported soda table glass from Poland.
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Lustrousstone on June 10, 2008, 03:26:45 PM
Scroll down to Adam A's comment about Jaffe Rose here (http://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,2754.0.html) halfway down page 3

Nic, if you pop in all your pictures in that linked thread have been eaten by Tinypic - perhaps Anne could help you reinstate them if you still have them
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Frank on June 10, 2008, 03:43:39 PM
 :D
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Leni on June 10, 2008, 03:50:24 PM
Hi Leni are you sure its not W/Fs

I thought so in the first place, John, but I posted it on Isit? and Steve (R) said no.   Perhaps I should take it and show it to Ray? 

And I think Adam is right about it being sandblasting, not etching or a transfer print or whatever.   
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: johnphilip on June 10, 2008, 06:33:48 PM
 I am not saying it is W/Fs but Ray will tell you in a flash, saves a lot of work.
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Leni on June 10, 2008, 06:53:16 PM
Thanks, John.  I'll pop round to him some time  :)
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Anne on January 25, 2012, 12:07:51 AM
Leni, did you ever get an answer on this ID?
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: johnphilip on January 25, 2012, 07:33:42 AM
Well i do now know its not W/Fs for sure .
Title: Re: Jubilee jug
Post by: Leni on January 25, 2012, 08:43:44 AM
Well i do now know its not W/Fs for sure .

I know that too now ;)  Never did get an ID, but familiarity with WF colours over time has convinced me this isn't, even if anything like it could be found in a WF catalogue.  I wouldn't even be thinking WF if I saw this today!  ::)   The amber colour is much too dark and 'toffee' coloured.  WF is far more 'golden syrup'  ;D 

I did wonder for a while about Webb, but I hadn't even considered Czech glass at the time when I bought it! 

So still unidentified, I'm afraid!  Never mind, perhaps we shall see some more like it this year, for the next jubilee  :24: