overshot glass quotation

Overshot glass had its origin in 16th century Venice, and the ability to make this ware eventually spread to Bohemia, Spain and elsewhere in Europe. Sometime prior to 1800, the production of this glass seems to have stopped. The Englishman Apsley Pellatt, owner of the Falcon Glass Works, is credited with reviving this decorative technique around 1845-1850. He acknowledged the origin of the technique by calling his product "Venetian Frosted Glass" or "Anglo-Venetian Glass". Later it would be called by other names, such as Frosted Glassware, ice Glass or Craquelle Glass.

It is important to understand the difference between crackle glass and overshot glass. Two different processes were involved. Crackle glass was produced by dipping a partially blown gob of hot glass in cold water. The sudden temperature change caused fissures or cracks in the glass surface. The gob was then lightly reheated and blown to its full shape. The blowing process enlarged the spaces between fissures to create a labyrinth of channels in varying widths. When cooled in the annealing lehr, the surface of the finished object had a crackled or cracked-ice effect.

Overshot glass was made by rolling a partially or fully inflated gob of hot glass on finely ground shards of glass that had been placed on a steel plate called a marver. The gob was then lightly reheated to remove the sharp edges of the ground glass.

overshot glass quotation

This a nice victorian art glass overshot rose bowl vase most likely by stevens and Williams. It has amber applied pulled feet. Excellent condition No chips or cracks in the bowl...

overshot glass quotation

"European gas prices have in our view overshot fundamentals fueled by a combination of supply and demand (heat wave, nuclear outages) concerns and exceptionally poor liquidity in the market, illustrated by erratic and sparse intra-day price moves," Goldman Sachs" analyst Samantha Dart said.

overshot glass quotation

All "Three Face" salt dips (Fig. 1) are reproductions. No original Three Face was ever made in a salt dip shape. The salt dip shape is one of a number of non-original Three Face shapes made by L.G. Wright Glass Company in new molds. The Three Face salt dip mold was among 700 Wright molds sold at auction May 27, 1999. It was purchased by Rosso Wholesale Glass which has put the mold into production.

The other new piece in vaseline is a look-alike Croesus covered butter dish (Fig. 2). This piece is also made from a new mold, this one made for Summit Glass. The new Croesus is unmarked; it does fluoresce under long wave black light.

overshot glass quotation

The 6″ ABC vaseline glass plate shown in Fig. 1 has two molded marks in the center. One mark is a bee (insect) with the letter H on the left wing, the letter I on the body and the letter G on the right wing. This mark was used by Higbee Glass, in operation ca. 1900-1920.

The other mark, an outline of the state of Ohio with the letter M, is the present day mark used by Mosser Glass Company of Ohio. Mosser Glass bought the original Higbee ABC plate mold and added the Mosser trademark next to the original Higbee bee mark. Mosser marks are shown in Fig. 4. Original Higbee mark and two common look-alike marks are shown in Fig. 3.

overshot glass quotation

Art glass is a subset of glass art, this latter covering the whole range of art made from glass. Art glass normally refers only to pieces made since the mid-19th century, and typically to those purely made as sculpture or decorative art, with no main utilitarian function, such as serving as a drinking vessel, though of course stained glass keeps the weather out, and bowls may still be useful.

The term is most used of American glass, where the style is "the logical outcome of the American demand for novelty during the 19th century and was characterized by elaborate form and exotic finish", but not always the highest quality of execution. There was a great interest in complex colour effects and painted enamelled glass.Art Nouveau glass, but the term may still be used for marketing purposes to refer to contemporary products. In fact the "Brilliant Period" style, which relied on deeply cut glass, continued to be made until about 1915, and sometimes thereafter.

Glass is sometimes combined with other materials. Techniques include glass that has been placed into a kiln so that it will mould into a shape, glassblowing, sandblasted glass, copper-foil glasswork, painted and engraved glass. In general the term is restricted to relatively modern pieces made by people who see themselves as artists who have chosen to work in the medium of glass and both design and make their own pieces as fine art, rather than traditional glassworker craftsmen, who often produce pieces designed by others, though their pieces certainly may form part of art. Studio glass is another term often used for modern glass made for artistic purposes. Art glass has grown in popularity in recent years with many artists becoming famous for their work; and, as a result, more colleges are offering courses in glass work.

During the early 20th-century art glass was generally made by teams of factory workers, taking glass from furnaces containing a thousand or more pounds. This form of art glass, of which Tiffany and Steuben in the U.S., Gallé in France and Hoya Crystal in Japan, Royal Leerdam Crystal in the Netherlands and Orrefors and Kosta Boda in Sweden are perhaps the best known, grew out of the factory system in which all glass objects were hand or mould blown by teams.

Most antique art glass was made in factories, particularly in the UK, the United States, and Bohemia, where items were made to a standard, or "pattern". This would seem contrary to the idea that art glass is distinctive and shows individual skill. However, the importance of decoration – in the Victorian era in particular – meant that much of the artistry lay with the decorator. Any assumption today that factory-made items were necessarily made by machine is incorrect. Up to about 1940, most of the processes involved in making decorative art glass were performed by hand.

Many items that are now considered art glass were originally intended for use. Often that use has ceased to be relevant, but even if not, in the Victorian era and for some decades beyond useful items were often decorated to such a high degree that they are now appreciated for their artistic or design merits.

Some art glass retains its original purpose but has come to be appreciated more for its art than for its use. Collectors of antique perfume bottles, for example, tend to display their items empty. As items of packaging, these bottles would originally have been used and thus would not ordinarily have been considered art glass. However, because of fashion trends, then as now, producers supplied goods in beautiful packaging. Lalique"s Art Nouveau glass and Art Deco designs by Josef Hoffmann among others have come to be considered art glass due to their stylish and highly original decorative designs.

There has been a growing recognition that moulded, mass-produced glass with little or no decoration but high artistic and fabrication quality such as that produced by Lalique should be considered art glass.

Up-market refined glassware, usually lead crystal, is highly decorated and is revered for its high quality of workmanship, the purity of the metal (molten glass mixture), and the decorative techniques used, most often cutting and gilding. Both techniques continue to be used in the decoration of many pieces made from lead crystal, and nowadays these pieces are regarded as art glass.

Cut glass is most often produced by hand, but automation is now becoming more common. Some designs show artistic flair, but most tend to be regular, geometric, and repetitious. Occasionally, the design can be considered a "pattern" to be replicated as exactly as possible, with the main purpose being to accentuate the refractive qualities, or "sparkle", of the crystal.

overshot glass quotation

Shot glass wedding favors are a great way to add a personal touch to your big day, but with so many options on the market, it can be hard to know where to start.

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These simple Game Over shot glass wedding favors is a great gift idea for your guests. Take your shots of liquor from this great novelty wedding shot glasses.

This personalized shot glass can hold up to 18-1/2oz of their favorite drink and has a lifetime warranty on the engraving. ZIUt"s one gift your guests will never forget at your wedding.

This personalized shot glass is made from high-quality thick glass molding and has a sleek, modern shape and style and has a permanent engraving too, so you can be sure guests would be able to use and remember fond memories from your wedding day.

These are some of the Coolest Custom shot-glass wedding favors on the market! These make fantastic personalized gifts for your guests and come in many different styles.

These personalized shot glass wedding favors are great because everyone has to use them at the wedding, so your guests will have a keepsake they will remember forever!

Bridal and Groom wedding shot glasses are a great way to showcase your love for each other or give your guests something to take home as a reminder of your wedding.

overshot glass quotation

Cut glass” is glass that has been decorated entirely by hand by use of rotating wheels. Cuts are made in the smooth surface of the glass by holding and moving the piece against various sized metal or stone wheels. The cuts are made very carefully to produce a predetermined pleasing pattern. Cutting may be combined with other decorative techniques, but “cut glass” usually refers to a glass object that has been decorated entirely by cutting.

Crackle Glass is known by other names, such as CRAQUELLE GLASS, ICE GLASS, OVERSHOT GLASS.It was the Venetian Glass Makers of the 16th Century. The glass was immersed in cold water while it was molten hot, thereby cracking the glass. The glass was then reheated and either mold or hand blown into the shape the glass blower desired. The reheating of the glass sealed the cracks. If you run your hands over CRACKLE GLASS, you can feel the cracks, but the inside is smooth to touch.Glass makers from the 19th Century and even today are still using the same methods.

Cranberry glass is a red glass made by adding gold oxide to molten glass. Tin, in the form of stannous chloride, is sometimes added in tiny amounts as a reducing agent. The glass is used primarily in expensive decorations.Cranberry glass is made in craft production rather than in large quantities, due to the high cost of the gold and the delicate mixing process required. The gold chloride is made by dissolving gold in a solution of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid (aqua regia). The glass is typically hand blown or molded. The finished, hardened glass is a type of colloid, a solid phase (gold) dispersed inside another solid phase (glass).

Crown Milano glass was made by Frederick Shirley at the Mt. Washington Glass Works about 1890. It was a plain biscuit color with a satin finish. It was decorated with flowers and often had large gold scrolls. Be aware that not all pieces are marked.