Glass Message Board
Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests => Glass => Topic started by: Fen on February 25, 2010, 02:01:50 PM
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I had hopes of Fenton for this white milk glass bud vase (or possibly candlestick). Not Portieux but never mind. Now I have this sinking feeling it might be Avon! What are your thoughts?
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Highly likely. It turns up in yucky, mottledy aquaey, milk glass blue as well.
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Not Fenton.
This is a VERY common piece here in the states. I see them at yard sales for a dollar.
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;D
It looks like an Avon bottom to me. However, do you think it might be opaline glass, rather than milk glass?
That might just make it worth a dollar and an extra couple of cents!
Avon have made opaline glass perfume bottles, (I think I have a scottie dog in the attic).
Sadly, the glass is so thick, the gorgeous effect of opaline glass is sort of lost.
(I reckon a dollar is roughly 75 pence just now? Do you actually get that much for these?)
But you could stick a candle in it (if you like candles) and not worry too much about it getting damaged if you forget about it and let it burn right down - with the added advantage of not really having to look at it too closely in candle-light.
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Know what, if I lived in the States I'd happily buy ten for a dollar each, stick a black candle in them and have a party. They'd look great.
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;D
Just enjoy it, then! :thup: You're right, a black candle would look good in it.
(Avon things don't shift too well in the charity shops around here, I don't think they have a lot of monetary value.)
Sorry if you thought I was being derogatory. :-[
I did buy some for interest, a good while ago - not in milk or opaline glass, it has to be said. While peering at the base to take some photographs, I managed to cover myself and my clothes with a goodish quantity of the rather stale remnants of the "perfume" one had contained. :-X
It was the most appaling trouble to get rid of the stink - loads of sodium bicarbonate did do the trick eventually, but I think the rather smelly experience put me off anything Avon. My skin does strange things to perfume - I tried Calvin thing's "Eternity" once - a tester in the duty free section. On most folk, it smells like honeysuckle. On me it stank of Parma violets.)
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Not in the least derogarory, just genuinely funny and I enjoyed it. Parma Violets - that takes me back, little lozenge shaped sweeties, I can still taste them.
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Avon had its day, fetched good money once because of all the price guides. The the Internet came along and suddenly it dawned that 'hey' there are thousands of these things. Yet, so what, it might not be in the class of Lalique for artistic merit but it was probably made in similar quantities and it is a cultural phenomenon.
It will make a comeback as a collectable, half the stuff that shows up on this board these days was garbage 30 years ago... (At which time respectable glass dealers i.e. It was made before 1900, used Monart as ashtrays) ...and with all the bits damaged through contempt now who knows what future prices Avon will fetch. Mind you, if your one had a ubiquitous plastic stopper it is not complete.
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I thought for a minute there that I should be on a mission to find that plastic stopper and put the complete item in the back of the cupboard until fashions change once again. Sadly, there is nothing to screw onto. Neither could it have had a cork stopper as the slope to reach the aperture would mean that the cork had to be over two inches long and the circumference of a pencil! A candlestick, a bud vase? Hee Hee...not one of my best buys.
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Now you'll see them everywhere, because they are :24:
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:)
I'm sure the apperture of the bottle I had my "experience" with looked just like that. It's all packed away but I might be able to check the pics I took. The stopper were slim, with that concertina-like plastic surround to them.
I wasn't that fond of parma violets, and after I covered myself with it, I had to sit in the enclosed space of the car for a 5 hour journey home, suffering from the stink.
I have gone right off perfume of any sort, permanently.
Getting back to your piece, when you hold the thinner parts to the light, to try to see through it, is there a "fire" in the glass? A bluey, yellowy and perhaps even reddish in the centre glow (sort of pale sunset-y colours).
If there is, it's opaline glass.
Thanks for your input, Frank.
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Not Avon. Anchor Hocking, "Thousand Line" or "Stars and Bars", fairly recent (1970s ring a bell, but not sure - I can't find a reference since google keeps tossing up sale items) and very common.
Edited - 1941 - 1960.
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:thup:
That's very interesting Cathy, thanks for elucidating.
This is not my area at all. Teach me to jump in with assumptions. :-[
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No worries, Sue! :hug: Nice to find something I can answer for once. Apparently they make nice candlestick holders. :)