Glass Message Board
Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests => Glass => Topic started by: keith on February 16, 2011, 01:35:04 PM
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Kralik crackle was my first thought but then saw the gold and thought Italy but with a rounded rim and polished pontil,English? now I'm confused ::) :huh:help please.
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I am SOOOO jealous :mrgreen:
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Keith how tall is it? Have you found anything else out about it?
m
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Hello M,it's 6 inches tall and looks very much like Kralik crackle except for the gold,I'll have to email Craig a picture and see what he thinks ;D
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my guess would be Kralik - just because I love a challenge ;D and I'm not afraid of looking stupid :ooh:
m
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Have spoken to Craig and he said it looks like Kralik but he's never seen one with gold before,going to check the vase and see if I can get a good close up of the surface :huh:
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Best I can do,it looks like gold leaf was applied before the crackle process,feel free anyone to correct me on the techie side of glass making ::)
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Because manufacturing/techniques/treatment definitions vary between the U.S. & Europe all I can say is that this would not be considered crackle in the U.S. Neat piece though. Ken
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Ken can you show us a piece of what would be considered crackle glass in the US please?
Is it like Ice glass/overshot?
thanks
m
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M over here we have two types of what many call crackle. One produced the traditional method of manufacture (cooling) & the 2nd a molded pattern that at first glance certainly would pass for crackle. The vase is a Diamond Stretch vase made in the traditional method while the decanter is a McKee piece where the crackle effect (note the word effect) is in the mold. I can't speak to the vase in question though as it may be considered crackle in Europe while over here it in all probability would not be considered crackle in my opinion. Ken
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Just for my 2 cents worth --- :-\ :thud:
They all look like a *crackle finish* to me (IMHO) as to me Crackled is like glass that has those real cracks in it.....but that is just me thinking out loud here. Has like those little cracks broken inside the glass....
:spls2:
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There seems to be a number of types of 'crackle' glass,here are two Kralik and one,type I'm more familiar with....
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I have crackle that is tight no gaps and cased over, tight and cased over, crackle that is a little open and not cased over, crackle that is quite wide cased over, and crackle that is quite wide (like Keiths red and gold) and not cased over.
I think they are all started in the same way, i.e. dipped in water to cool and crack, then they are either left tight (ie not blown out further after dipping) and not cased, or left tight not blown out further but cased over, or dipped then blown out further to widen the crackle effect and then either cased over or uncased.
I consider all these crackle glass. As it happens I don't like the ones that are crackled but not blown further and then cased over smooth. The effect doesn't appeal to me. All the others I like.
Ken I have also seen pictures of the mould blown 'crackle effect' pieces you are referring too. And they are not what *I* would consider crackle either. But the other pieces I refer to above are all blown (mould or free) and are dipped to get the crackle effect I believe either before blowing further or left after dipping.
I'm open to correction here ;D
m
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I agree with M
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I know an american glassmaker (Rob - no surname) on an ME forum, and we discussed the effect of crackling and further blowing - he says it's official name is "primavera". Rob gave me the link to one of his friend's work to illustrate - it's fabby glass, worth having a peek just for interest!
http://www.pieperglass.com/gallery.php
:ooh: I'm having a teeny-tiny wonder if WMF might be a contender for maker - I don't know if they used foil...
(remembering I'm not good at WMF if it's not the most commonly seen Ikora.)
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Lovely glass Sue!
I'll try and do some close ups of different effects later to add to the thread for future ref. I do remember being very confused about what was Cracquelle and what was crackle etc a while ago and not being able to find references.
m
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M the examples I posted are just what we consider crackle & the other European examples posted are something we simply don't often see over here, e.g. the wider channels created by further manipulation of the piece. The vast majority (probably 95%+) of U.S. crackle are the tight line type & even most of our (U.S.) turn of the century hand glass houses didn't seem to be very involved in crackle or at least not nearly as much as European manufacturers. Mount Washington, Sandwich, Hobbs Bruckunier, made some crackle during the late 1800's into the turn of the century & later Steuben, Fry, Cambridge, Tiffin made limited crackle, but I don't believe anywhere to the extent of your Europeasn manufacturers & (again) its the tight crackle. Of course probably the kings of crackle over here were Blenko & Pilgrim as they both were quite prolific in this regard, far more so than anyone else & they were primarily of a later period. Maybe it was a marketing (sales)problem over here early & it simply did not catch on, I don't know, but its always (for me anyway) interesting to see the variables involved between U.S. glass & European glass techniques during concurrent periods. Ken
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I said earlier I thought this might have been gold leaf decoration,oops,make that gold aventurine surface decor' and after trawling through my books the only piece I can find with same treatment(not crackle) is a Harrach bowl,page 62,Truitts,shoot me down in flames! :wsh:
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You were right the first time; it's gold leaf. Aventurine is copper. The book is wrong.
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ta,Christine,back to gold leaf then ::)