Difficulty: Moderately Easy
Instructions
Things You'll Need:
* Magnifying glass
* Antique vase or glass reference book
2. Check out Depression-era glass vases. During the Great Depression, low-quality clear or see-through colored glass was manufactured by a handful of companies in the Midwest. Fakes tend to be heavier. Look at the patterns issued during this time, including Tulip, Bowknot, Hobnail and CherryBerry. Some patterns were produced by a particular company while others were produced by several companies. Check an antique glass reference book for details.
3. Search for marks on the glass. If you find a letter stamped on the bottom, check it against a reference book list of companies that produced antique vases. You may need to use a magnifying glass or place the vase under a bright light to find any marks, as they tend to be faint.
4. Find scratches on the glass. This indicates older glass when the scrapes line the bottom of the vase. If the pontil mark (the dip underneath the glass) appears polished, it proves that the vase was hand-blown by an artisan, not mass-produced by a machine.
5. Look for antique blown-glass vases. A deep blue vase, hand-blown by a glassmaker in one piece, with a rough pontil mark at the bottom, from late 1700s New England typifies this style. Sometimes designs were etched onto the glass, as in a thin Bohemian blown glass vase on top of a marble base, circa 1850.
6. Learn to recognize milk glass and other opaque antique vases. The dull coloring in early milk glass, caused by arsenic used in the mixture, differentiates it from fakes. The edges of early milk glass pieces sometimes have red or "fired" edges. Check for fake signatures--the McKee company signature has been faked on some items to trick people into thinking they're original. There's a long curvy "K" in the authentic signature; the replica "K" looks shorter.
Read more: How to Identify an Antique Glass Vase | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_5962710_identify-antique-glass-vase.html#ixzz1AhxGYYmk
I think there are lot of websites on the internet from where you can easily find glass vases according to our choice....
ReplyDeleteI am looking for inexpensive red, black and or white blown glass vases for a wedding. I need about 20 of them. They should be 15 to 18 inches long, something with a little character is preferred
ReplyDelete