Glass Message Board
Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests => Glass => Topic started by: uphoosier on May 06, 2010, 02:36:00 PM
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I'll be seeing this vase at an auction Saturday. It is identified as signed Durand, and from this single photo looks right. Can anyone point me in the direction of a website showing real and fake Durand signatures? Thanks for taking a look.
(http://img.villagephotos.com/p/2003-9/385128/durand.jpg)
BTW, I've found some past sales on blue vases, but nothing in gold. How does the interest in the two colors compare? I know the treatment is generically called aurene, which I think was a Steuben trademark. What did Durand call this finish?
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I can not direct you to a signature site, but I can address the value differentiation between gold and Blue. My experience is, regardless of house, that the blue generally commands a higher price than the gold. Depending on company and rarity of shape the price bump generally appears to be around 20% or more for blue over gold.
In the case of some of the Steuben Aurene pieces in rare colors, they are in a completely different range regardless of shape..... a red Aurene hearts and vines Steuben vase has brought as much as $30,000, while a nice example of the same shape in gold or blue would generally be under $2000
Craig
Edit: The shape appears to be right based on some examples of threaded pieces I found. Most signed examples I found (not a whole lot) showed the company name, and also a numeric id such as 1812-7 which I found on the underside of a threaded piece in the same shape as the pictured vase in a Durand decor which won an award at the Sesqui-centennial International Exposition held in Philadelphia in 1926. (150th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence). I also found information indicating that the "u" in Durand may be in the form of a "v" in later signatures. Earlier examples were apparently not signed but later pieces were.
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Thank you, Craig. I am sure this is signed, as the auction house that has it would not know what it is if not signed. At least here in the States, if someone were going to fake a signature on this piece, they would choose something other than Durand.
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You are right. The average idiot, I mean forger, here stateside would have signed it Steuben or Tiffany....
Good luck at the auction....
Craig