Glass Message Board
Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests => Glass => Topic started by: grandma on August 26, 2008, 12:24:57 PM
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Hi Can anyone identify the origin of this vase please. It is quite heavy at 900g and is 24 cm tall. The inside of the vase looks as though the 'prunts' have been pushed out from inside. I can't find any mark to the base.
Mod: Posts merged for ease of photo viewing and possible replies :)
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Hi I just submitted a post asking for identification of a hobnail vase but the main image did not come out as expected. It's necessary to view this image to identify the vase - Sorry :-[
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Hi and welcome to the board. :) One of the things you'll be asked for a great deal in ID requests is a photo of the bottom of the item because the bottom tells us so much about it. Could you add one for us to see please?
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Here is the base of the vase - hopefully someone will merge this with the others as I couldn't find a way to add a photo to the existing messages. I hope this has enough detail - otherwise I'll have to take another one later. Thanks
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Thanks for the base picture - it could do with being a bit more base and a bit less side really, but someone may be able to tell you more from it.
To reply to a post look below the last post in a topic and you'll see a blue tab with REPLY - click that and it adds your reply below the question so we can keep all the posts on one item together for you. :)
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It's hard to get a photo of the base but this might help.
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Much better, thank you. :clap:
Now the next question is about the colouring - I'm trying to work out if it's within the glass or applied to the surface. In one of your pictures there seems to be some clear patches - is the colour worn away or is it just where the light is reflecting from it?
Also, how wide is the vase? (The more info we have the better we can evaluate things. 8))
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Getting there! The vase has a top diameter of 3" (7.5cm). The colour, as you correctly observed, is missing in a few patches around the top rim but the colour is definitely in the glass - it hasn't been applied. I also noticed, upon close examination of the fairly uneven base, that there actually is a large B as on my other vase like this one - it's barely visible and wouldn't really be identifiable if I hadn't seen another like it. As I said though, this one is heavier than the first one I had. Thanks for all your help. Anne Cheers
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I also noticed, upon close examination of the fairly uneven base, that there actually is a large B as on my other vase like this one - it's barely visible and wouldn't really be identifiable if I hadn't seen another like it.
Hi, is the other vase exactly the same? It might help to see a photo of them both together and a closeup of the 'B' base marking you mention.
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Hi I thought of sending the photos that you mention but found that I had deleted these after selling the original vase. (Obviously I no longer have it so can't take another photo.) The other vase had a waisted shape and was lighter in weight but all other features were the same. The B was large and hand 'drawn'. The base of this other vase was smoother so it was easy to see the B. Cheers
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Your vase appears to be made in the spirit of the Murano lenti vases. I saw a vase similar to yours being sold as Barovier the other day, but I do not think the attribution was correct. The Murano lenti (Barovier and Seguso) pieces have "lumps" that are molded than applied. The ones I have seen are all the same size and nicely rounded. The ones on your vase look like they may be molded onto the surface, have more space between them than the classic Murano lenti, and have two different sizes. The walls of your vase look thinner than the Murano lenti vases.
From the colors I suspect that your vase may either be Czech or Blenko. I don't know, but I hope this will help some. Can you tell if the "lumps" were molded into the glass or if they were applied? If they are molded into the glass, it will tell you a lot. It is a pretty vase, no matter who made it.
Anita
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Hi Anita, Blenko is a good thought. Grandma says in her first post up the top that the bumps are hollow as if pushed out from the inside. Does that help further?
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Thanks, Anne. I missed that totally. My eyes are lasting well as I get older, but my brain is rapidly fading. :( Having hobnails that are pushed out lets us know it isn't a Murano lenti piece. I am glad that I was not tempted to buy the one that was on auction the other day.
I checked some Blenko sites this morning and couldn't find this exact vase, but I saw a few similar things. Maybe a Blenko expert will appear soon. Staying with the B's because of the letter on Grandma's second vase -- another company that does hobnail vases similar to Blenko is Bischoff. I would mention a couple of Czech companies that start with a B, but that would probably be more confusing than helpful right now. It can be so hard to track Czech glass.
Anita
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This is Terrys pic of his similar labelled Blenko "bubblewrap" vases. There seems to be a difference in the bubbles, not just the size and I've never heard of a mark in the glass for Blenko. I think they were only made in that size / shape.
Gallery of Blenko marks here http://www.blenkocollectors.com/blenkocollmarks.htm
Neither have I heard of a mark in the glass for Bischoff. All that I saw of Terry's collection were labelled but it's possible I guess.
My first reaction was Italian but I don't have the name of any particular company to suggest. I seem to rem that Terry had a similar one which he could not id but I can't find a pic right now.
Def not Czech IMHO
Peter
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Guess it's pressed blown same as this:
http://www.pressglas-pavillon.de/deckeldosen/02810.html
maker unknown >:D