Glass Message Board
Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. => British & Irish Glass => Topic started by: neilh on July 27, 2018, 09:34:19 PM
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I was lucky enough to be shown this by a fellow collector recently. It's part of the "1554 set" of varied drinking glass shapes which appears in the 1893 Percival Vickers catalogue - this one is a wine glass.
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This was in fact just one of a set which the collector had. The company did a range of cut & engraved tableware sets using a numbering system that started at 1500. The earliest of these sets came out in the 1870s and several of them are fairly common today, others very difficult to find.
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very attractive - do we assume this 'set' is only four pieces in total Neil, or are there two more glasses? I think we might name this design as 'fan splits and trellis'. :)
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I recall the collector had a full set of 6 wines in this pattern. I haven't seen anything else from the 1554 come up but the pattern was used on a full tableware set, everything bar a celery.
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Interesting and I like the engraving. It reminds me of coal mines for some reason.
Are the bowls quite small? I just ask as I have some Rheinische Glashutten wine glasses from around that period and the bowls are quite a bit smaller than we would normally drink from - seem to go through the wine more quickly with them ;D
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They made several sizes for the type of drink - sherry, port, claret, hock - it is tricky to work out which one you have as the differences are minimal. The smallest I have found is a liqueur, 9cms tall.
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mine are actually wine glasses (hock) but each Christmas I'm always surprised about how small the bowl is ... probably because I usually drink from a glass like this - 380ccm. So it feels strange every year ;D
https://www.riedel.com/en-gb/shop/sommeliers/riesling-440090115