Glass Message Board
Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests => Glass => Topic started by: agincourt17 on November 17, 2013, 04:46:20 PM
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A clear pressed glass vase, 6 ½ inches high, with a top rim diameter of 4 ½ inches. The side of the foot is embossed with Regd. No. 735621. (Permission for the re-use of these images on the GMB granted by runningstitch).
RD 735621 is not listed at http://www.great-glass.co.uk/glass%20notes/regnos08.htm
but would have been registered in April 1928.
Is the number in the Blue Book? If so, would some kind GMB member provide me with the precise registration details, please?
Fred.
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I think I have partially answered my own question in that
http://www.glassmessages.com/index.php?topic=33644.0
shows a comport marked Regd.No.735621 - registered to Clayton Mayers & Co. Ltd., London, on 15th Feb. 1928.
As CM & Co. were basically wholesalers and importers, manufacturer not known (but could it possibly have been Inwald - as with 'Jacobean' registrations).
My vase and the comport seem to be of two totally different shapes with no obvious points of similarity in the design. I wonder what the unique point for the design registration was? Could it simply have been the lanceolate shape to the ribs on the comport flat top surface and the top half of the vase?
Fred.
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appears to be missing from the Blue Book Fred - although it will be February 1928 in the sequence, the same date as Anne's comport carrying the same Rd. No.
As with some other known Registrations - where there are multiple shapes under one number, it appears to be the decoration only - on this vase and the comport - that was being registered. Lanceolate is a very good descriptive word for the moulded pattern - one of our native plantains with similarly shaped leaves has just this same name as the specific part of its binomial moniker.
I'm not too well up on pressed glass, but had thought that C. M. registered their designs/imports - so bit surprised it's not showing in the book. I expect there is some legitimate reason for its absence. Where did Anne get here confirmation from - have I missed something - there are too many links probably, so expect I have.
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Paul, there is a good overwiew of Clayton Mayers, including a list of their British registered design numbers to 1940 at
http://www.cloudglass.com/ClaytonMayers.htm
(http://www.cloudglass.com/ClaytonMayers.htm)
Fred
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thanks - I did in fact look at that page, but obviously too quickly and didn't see there were two columns - and presumably that's where Anne sourced her confirmation.
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This is an Inwald design, known in several vase shapes in marigold Carnival Glass (in which it is highly sought after). The pattern is known to Carnival collectors as Coronet or Princeton.
Coronet was actually the name given to this pattern suite in a 1928 British Pottery Gazette ad, where it was also described as "A New Clayton Mayers Range for 1928" - "The success of 1928 in glassware is the new Coronet range".
The pattern was first identified (in Carnival) by Stephen and I back in 1997. The Pottery Gazette ad and information about it in Carnival etc., appears in our first Schiffer book "Carnival Glass The Magic & The Mystery" (first ed, 1998). The pattern is also shown in Inwald catalogues.
Here is my Coronet vase in marigold - this is the small 6.5 inch version.
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Thank you, Glen, for your very informative reply.
I will have a browse through the Inwald catalogues at the soonest opportunity.
Fred.