Bohemian/Czech crystal
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6 ounce size, very long stem, 7 3/4 inches tall. Blown bowl with floral and criss cross cut patterns. Faceted stem with diagonal punty cuts.
A shop visitor has one with a label that says "genuine lead crystal, hand cut and made in Germany." The flower makes me think they are 1960s. A nice thing is the stem is unusually thick at the base of the bowl, which makes them less likely to break.
Condition: Used but no damage.
$250.00 -
Very light weigh blown glass. Flat bottoms with smooth pontil. Straight sided with flared top rim. Multiple depth and needle etching techniques. 5 1/2 inches tall.
Condition: No damage at all. I do see a bit of gray table wear, scuffs, and what may be tool marks indicating antique glassware. Likely Bohemian or English around 1900.$125.00 -
9 1/2 inches tall, 24 ounce capacity. White enameled vine leaves and bunches of grapes which look to have been applied grape by grape. This big chalice or goblet is known as a rummer or roemer in German.
Greenish gold color swirl stem and grapes. Adorned with prunts, (rosettes), around the stem. Looking close, there are tiny air bubbles and a larger one inside the stem. When tapped it rings longer and prettier than any crystal I've ever owned but it is very lightweight.
[This is a revival of a form from of the 17th and early 18th century Netherlands, Rhineland and Saxony and dates to circa 1890 - 1920. This took a special skill, which was only possible with the development of permanent industrial glass factories, the type that sprung up in 19th century Bavaria and northern Bohemia (now the Czech Republic.)
As to who made it, it could well be by Josephinenhutte (in Silesia, now part of Poland). Or, indeed, by any one of the Bohemian makers such as Harrach, Eggermann, Phofl and especially Fritz Heckert who made some spectacular enameled roemers in the 1890s. ...Robert S. of JustAnswer.]
Condition: One of the grape beads is missing.
$130.00