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Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests => Glass => Topic started by: mhgcgolfclub on June 06, 2014, 04:10:35 PM

Title: Early Pressed Glass Sugar and Creamer
Post by: mhgcgolfclub on June 06, 2014, 04:10:35 PM
Early pressed glass matching sugar and creamer new additions to my collection.
They are not marked and I do not know who made them.
They are very heavy the sugar weighing 718gm and the creamer 645gm. Height 4.5" or 11.5cm
Polished bases.

Roy
Title: Re: Early Pressed Glass Sugar and Creamer
Post by: pamela on June 07, 2014, 08:33:49 PM
Impressive! A very nice find, Roy, congratulations!

With these flower-shaped feet my gut feeling says France or Saarland, probably even Villeroy & Boch, Wadgassen?
I've got NO evidence for this, just an idea  :-\ :-X
Title: Re: Early Pressed Glass Sugar and Creamer
Post by: mhgcgolfclub on June 08, 2014, 08:37:05 PM
Thanks Pamela

I just assumed they would be English which they may well be . I think we sometimes forget that there could be a number of countries which made similar pieces including these .

I would think they date to around 1850.

regards Roy
Title: Re: Early Pressed Glass Sugar and Creamer
Post by: Paul S. on June 10, 2014, 08:22:08 PM
Hello Roy........    Assuming for a moment that this is British, then it's fairly safe to say that this would have been made prior to c. 1860 - based on the method of handle attachment  -  it has the squiggly finial at the lower end.
Would Pamela care to comment if Continental handles follow the same two forms of attachment as the British pieces, and would they also have had a similar date line for the change from one style to the other?

My reason for commenting really was to say that there is a sugar bowl showing in Raymond Notley's 'Popular Glass of the 19th and 20th Centuries' (page 9) which although not the same design pattern of massive pillars, does have identical scalloped/petaled feet - and although Notley's is unmarked, he attributes his to being English and gives a date of 1845.      Your idea of date is therefore, possibly, not far out.

Both Slack and Lattimore also show single examples of sugars with similar feet, which they attribute to Ed. Moore.
Equally, Pamela could be correct with the suggestion of Continental. :)