It looks very brassy and shiny in the photo - it's not. It's lovely but it's not as gorgeous as the gold on my Etruscan style plate which dates to about 60 or so years earlier c. 1850. There is an obvious difference. It's also nothing like that bright shiny gold you find on 1950s glass either. It's 24ct gold according to their website. I think applied then fired.
So taking the lampshade as an example, it's two layer cameo glass ruby over clear. The clear background has that leaf design. The ruby top cameo layer is plain. It's been blown into a mold for shape and then cased in ruby I guess? Then somehow that rhombus design has been acid etched onto the background clear glass with the ruby cameo layer being left untouched in certain areas to give the pattern? I presume that's how it's been done as no person has hand etched that design obviously. But if it was done that way then that's a lot of waste of coloured glass being taken off to just leave the pattern. Perhaps it was hugely expensive to do hence it being abandoned as a technique eventually?
But how was it etched? that is the question
The lampshade was blown glass. So is this bowl and all the goblets I've seen.
Their current bowl with a gold rim about the same size is E.675 so I'm very happy with my new salad bowl
m