Glass Message Board
Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. => British & Irish Glass => Topic started by: antiquecollectible on June 26, 2014, 08:00:36 PM
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Hello everybody
Although I have been a collector of various nice glass items over the years, I am relatively new to the internet and modern technology. I am hoping someone can help me to identify this lovely big vase I have in my collection as I have never managed to identify it and I would love to know where it came from so that I can hunt down and add some similar pieces to my collection.
Please help me with any information you have on the maker so that I can find some more shapes and sizes for my display.
I hope I have done this right and I am in the right section etc but please forgive me if I have made a mistake as I am still learning and I apologise in advance if I have done this wrong.
Best wishes
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Hi :) I am sorry but I don't know exactly who made your vase, maybe it would help if you added the dimensions of the vase? You mentioned it is large but exact dimensions would deffo help.
My instant hunch is possibly ditchfield, but please take that with a pinch of salt as I am by no means an expert in this area of glass, but that might give you somewhere to start.
I am sure there will be much more knowledgeable members along soon to give you a clearer idea, even if it is just a better guess.
Best of luck with your collection, it is a nice looking vase and I am sure your display will look great :)
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Welcome both to the board. Not Ditchfield; I'd expect better finishing. The four-prong pontil rod might be a clue though
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American studio producers may also be worth considering. I vaguely recall Ross recently suggesting Don Carlson in the US, who uses a four-prong pontil. Some of his work is similar so may be another avenue to explore.
Greg
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There's Norman Stuart-Clarke. He uses a four prong pontil rod.
I agree completely, not Ditchfield. I've just checked the bottoms of a couple of early one-off bits - large broken pontil scar. A large piece such as this would be marked if it was Ditchfield.
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Thank you for the warm welcome Christine, much appreciated :) I am new to the forum but been interested in glass for a while now.
I see what you mean about the finish and ditchfield and having had a look online I fully agree and it was a bit of a wild stab in the dark, sorry for the confusion.
As there is no census of conclusion so far, and I do like the look of your vase, I have done a bit of research for you Antiquecollectible.
The best guess I have after looking around for a while is that it could be either Norman Stuart (like Chopin suggested) or possibly even a rare Peter Layton vase on organic style (although I would expect that to be signed) or even a siddy langley???
I'm probably not helping but I have done my best for you :)
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Hello again
Many thanks for all your effort and advice it is much appreciated.
I am so sorry about this but as I was inspecting the finish after reading one of the earlier comments, I noticed a faint squiggle which I hadn't seen before.... A SIGNATURE! What a doofus!
Unfortunately I cannot make it out for the life of me, I couldn't even see it at first, so I have taken a close up picture and I hope you can tell me what it says or who it is?
Yours hopefully..........
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That's Peter Layton's signature, the base finish is slightly unusual.
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That's great thank you Greg, and thanks to mostly modern who also said it could be Peter Layton.
I have not heard of him before but I am going to be looking for some in the future it is a lovely finish to the vase.
Like you said it is very organic and has a beautiful spectrum of colours to the iridescent finish. The texture is like snakeskin and very tactile.
Is this kind of finish and colourway common to Peter Layton? as I would like to get some more similar for a display?
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There are quite a few examples of Peter's work on the GMB, if you enter his name into the search function at the top of the board, it should hopefully bring up a few.
The base finish appears somewhat unusual, compared to other pieces of his work I have handled that have been blown at London Glassblowing. Perhaps this may have been produced at a different time. London Glassblowing are always very helpful, I'm sure if you send them a few pictures, they will be able to tell you a little more detail.
http://www.londonglassblowing.co.uk/
Hope you enjoy the board. :)
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Sincere apologies to both antiquecollectible and Mostly Modern for not welcoming you both!
(I got sidetracked by the glass, I'm afraid I have a rather one-track brain)
I don't think the Layton studio has been making irridescent glass for some time now... it is certainly not common.
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I see there's currently a piece of Peter's work online with a similar type of base finish. Although a different design it is also iridescent, perhaps the piece at the start of this thread may also date to the 80s....?
Please do let us know if you hear back from London Glassblowing, it would be great to know what they say. :)