With its magical sparkle and classic beauty, there's really nothing quite like antique cut glass. Your grandma's china cabinet was probably full of it, and if you're like many of us, you inherited ...
Q: I grew up in an older home that had unique pressed glass in the bathroom windows. It allowed lots of light in, but you didn't have to put up shades or curtains for privacy. Is this glass still ...
In the 1930s, small colorful glass dishes were given away as premiums for purchasing sacks of flour or boxes of oatmeal or detergent. Well padded in the flour, a sturdy glass cup or bowl would survive ...
Low-cost molded or pressed glass with an iridescent finish had many names in the very early 20th century. First sold as inexpensive molded and pressed decorative wares, at a time when fine glass was ...
Q. I am very interested in some satin-glass articles I acquired around 1954 in an antiques store in Kansas. I have been told the glass is in the “Cabbage Leaf” pattern. The items are 6½ inches tall ...
Q-I have an interest in children`s toy glass dishes from the 19th and early 20th Centuries. Where can I find information on the dishes and pressed glass patterns? A-”Toy Glass” identifies patterns and ...
This 19th-century, tulip-shaped vase was made with pressed glass and natural gemstone coloring. It sold for $960 at auction. Talk about jewel tones! Amethyst glass was made to resemble the famous ...