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Author Topic: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.  (Read 2545 times)

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Offline Ivo

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Re: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.
« Reply #10 on: February 02, 2007, 09:21:16 PM »
Quote
The piece is heavy, and has a very few tiny bubbles.

Tiny bubbles are known as "seeds" in glass terms, most Mexican glass is "seedy". Sorry for confusing you.

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Offline Pip

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Re: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.
« Reply #11 on: February 02, 2007, 10:10:28 PM »
Tiny bubbles are known as "seeds" in glass terms

How interesting, I didn't know that ... thanks Ivo.

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Offline artmustel

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Re: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.
« Reply #12 on: February 02, 2007, 11:45:52 PM »
Since I'm so ignorant regarding glass and other many matters, I searched in Google  for "seedy glass", and it showed a lot of pictures of frosted glass. The piece which pictures I posted here is not frosted at all. Now I remember many years ago my parents brought from Czechoslovakia some nice and colorful glass pieces, and coincidentally all of them had those tiny bubbles. Now that country is in Europe, although at the time it was a communist country (maybe this fact excluded it from the european context).
And I'm not an american who brought this piece from Mexico. Rather the other way around.
Thanks.
 

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Offline Anne

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Re: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.
« Reply #13 on: February 02, 2007, 11:59:14 PM »
As we said above, artmustel (that sounds so formal, do you have a personal name we can call you?) seedy glass contains bubbles. Some glazing glass makers use the same term to describe their types of glazing glass, some of which is frosted or bubbled-surface textured. But your piece isn't made from glazing glass, so that's not relevant here. :) Seeds are the tiny bubbles in the glass. In some pieces bubbles are good, they are put their deliberately as part of the design (i.e. Whitefriars controlled bubbled glass, Pulegoso (frothy) bubbled glass as made in Murano, etc.), but in many other items they are not meant to be there and may be a sign that the glass is made to a cheaper standard or lower quality. Much of this glass is made in places such as Mexico, Spain, China. In the design you have, if it was made by a quality maker I should expect to see no bubbles at all.  It is a pretty decorative piece, true, but in my opinion is not a high-quality piece. It's one of those things you buy because you like it rather than for its high value (I have a lot of similar glassware!)  :)  Hope this helps.

Useful links:
http://www.glassonline.com/infoserv/dictionary/591.html Definition of seed
http://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,4367.0.html Dots in glass - discussion of seeds in glass
Cheers! Anne, da tekniqual wizzerd
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Offline artmustel

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Re: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.
« Reply #14 on: February 03, 2007, 01:45:25 AM »
Anne, Artmustel is my name (ARTuro MUSTELier). Thanks for finding my nickname so formal. If you look the posts above this one you will find less formal nicks that I don't think are real names. And I didn't ask because I wanted that my piece was a legit Murine or Chalot or whatever; I just was curious (and I have many interests, so I love forums) because it was UNUSUAL for me, although it is a POS for some sophisticated member of this forum, that was manufactured in a POS country. I'm glad I won't need to ask here again since some members are so full of it and prejudice.

(Response by Moderator - Svazzo)
Please, there is no need for this. You have misunderstood the previous comments.

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Offline Ivo

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Re: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.
« Reply #15 on: February 03, 2007, 08:29:31 AM »
Your apparent disappointment with the attribution does not change it, Arturo. You have not scored a major work of art, and there is no point in getting abusive about it.

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Offline Frank

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Re: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.
« Reply #16 on: February 03, 2007, 10:48:15 AM »
What is wrong with a bit of primitivity in glass, Mexican glass is not bad per se, I have some Mexican glass in my collection. You get seed bubbles in some of the finest glass but yes it is often a feature in countries that are not very wealthy, the glassmakers have to be more efficient to survive and use glass that a lush company might be able to afford to just throw away.

In another thread we have a piece of art glass that has been made recycled glass. There is often a snobbery associated with a glass origin but then there are many others who find that the social story that the glass can tell is as fascinating as the handful of names that can produce the ultimate it technical sterility  >:D or perfection. My preference is more for a piece of art glass that imparts the feelings of the maker or useable glass that is the right shape, size and weight for comfortable use.

Ysart Glass is in many respects a very primitive glass and invariably contains not only seed bubbles but other contaminants in the mix.

Likewise when we deal with people from different countries and communicate in one language, English - that for many members is a second language the we must apply tolerance to interactions. It is of course inevitable that people will get irritated with each other, but just concentrate on the glass not the people please. We are a serious board interested in expanding and sharing knowledge of glass.

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Offline Pip

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Re: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.
« Reply #17 on: February 03, 2007, 11:11:16 AM »
It's a real shame that this thread deteriorated to the extent it did.  New posters really need to be made aware that this forum doesn't provide instant answers to questions and patience is needed in getting an attribution - sometimes it takes days yet other times it takes months if ever at all.  Also, when people ask a question about their piece of glass there's absolutely no point in then refusing to accept what's been suggested - a lot of people, me included, post glass up here that turns up to have been a chinese repro/copy, or a POS  ;D - it happens, and getting aggressive and calling people names is not the done thing and not necessary at all IMO.  Ivo really does know his stuff and doesn't deserve to be cross-examined over the information he has offered.  I do hope Arturo continues to post and contribute to this board but without the attitude - good manners are de rigeur on this board - that's why I like it so much!

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Offline svazzo

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Re: Please Help Identifying a glass centerpiece.
« Reply #18 on: February 03, 2007, 07:37:23 PM »
Ok everyone, lets leave it at that.
No need to start insulting people or their countries.
We are here to talk about glass, and if mentioning how a technique of making it might be harder or easier than another, there is certainly no need to call someone out on it, take ofence or anything of the sort. If you wanted information that is what you received. Now lets leave this alone before it really gets out of hand.
Also, theres no need to retaliate. This talk will now be closed.
Javier - Moderator
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