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Kitchen Glassware (Kitchen Glassware of the Depression Years)
Kitchen Glassware (Kitchen Glassware of the Depression Years)
by Gene Florence Cathy Florence
Our Price: $16.47
Used from: $14.95

Florence's Glassware Pattern Identification Guide (Florence's Glassware Pattern Identification)
Florence's Glassware Pattern Identification Guide (Florence's Glassware Pattern Identification)
by Gene Florence Cathy Florence
Our Price: $13.57
Used from: $4.98

Elegant Glassware of the Depression Era: Identification and Value Guide (Elegant Glassware of the Depression Era)
Elegant Glassware of the Depression Era: Identification and Value Guide (Elegant Glassware of the Depression Era)
by Cathy Florence Gene Florence
Our Price: $16.47
Used from: $15.72

Bedroom and Bathroom Glassware of the Depression Years
Bedroom and Bathroom Glassware of the Depression Years
by Margaret Whitmyer Kenn Whitmyer
Used from: $5.73

Country Living: American Glassware: What Is It? What Is It Worth? (Country Living)
Country Living: American Glassware: What Is It? What Is It Worth? (Country Living)
by Joe L. Rosson Helaine Fendelman
Our Price: $16.16
Used from: $4.60

Wonderful Days Of Carnival Glassware

Louis Comfort Tiffany and Favrile glass are with whom the passion for carnival glass had its start. Later Steuben Glass Company was founded by Fredrick Carter and he began making Aurene glass. The glassware by Tiffany and Steuben was hand blown along with some metallic oxides which were added carefully with the hot glass. Then the next step was spraying on to the surface while being heated up. The Tiffany and Steuben glassware were the ones preferred by the upper class people for the beautiful appearance and the high price.

 

Later on the scene came Felton Glass Company which started to produce its own line of iridescent glassware and other companies followed them. The carnival glassware was common among the poorer class of people as it was cheap and easily available. It was named so as this glassware was given away in carnivals.

Wonderful days of Carnival glassware

The majority of this glassware was made in America between the years of 1908 and 1918. Later the manufacturing on these units slowed down and by mid-century the carnival glassware started to come from Europe instead. When collectors started to seek out the glass in the latter part of the twentieth century, the manufacturers of America started producing these again just for the collectors of glassware.

Carnival glassware is considered as the cheaply available glassware and is very thick pressed glass that comes in different patterns and colors. The hot glass is sprayed with metallic oxides to produce the characteristic sheen which is present in this glassware. The glass is made iridescent by the light interference patterns produced by the metallic oxides.

Glassware collection

If you are wanting to learn more about collecting this type of glassware, it might be a good idea to join a collectors group as there are several enthusiastic and energetic carnival glassware collectors. Even though many companies manufactured this glassware, the Northwood Company is considered as the most important which is marked with an underscored N inside of a circle. Most of the collectors prefer Northwood glass as it has a symbol which is identified by all.

Many of the collectors concentrate on a particular pattern or color. There are three categories into which the colors fall, namely, dark, marigold and pastel. The least common are the pastels and the more common is the marigold color.

Collector clubs prove to be very useful in the sense that identifying the value of single glassware is very difficult. There are several factors upon which the value greatly depends which are the age, color, who made it, the condition of the piece and also the rarity. Some of them are even worth thousand dollars. Collecting Carnival glass is a fun and exciting hobby and it might even earn you a nice sum of money.

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Depression Era Glassware News

A tradition to relish: Pickle trays add colorful snap to holiday table - Pittsburgh Post Gazette


Pittsburgh Post Gazette

A tradition to relish: Pickle trays add colorful snap to holiday table
Pittsburgh Post Gazette, PA - Nov 19, 2008
"Almost every [glass] company made them," says Leora Leasure, vice president of the Three Rivers Depression Era Glass Society. "Sometimes they were very ...

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Depression glass expert Florence will hold seminar in Umatilla - Orlando Sentinel


Depression glass expert Florence will hold seminar in Umatilla
Orlando Sentinel, FL - Nov 14, 2008
Florence also has written more then 80 books on the colored glassware. Depression-glass enthusiasts regularly consult his books Kitchen Glassware of the ...

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Home and garden briefs - Sun-Sentinel.com


Home and garden briefs
Sun-Sentinel.com, FL - Nov 14, 2008
It dates from the early 1900s and was designed by Karl Kipp for Roycraft. Can you match makers with patterns of Depression-era kitchen glassware?

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• At the Portland Expo Center antique show, people engross ... - The Oregonian - OregonLive.com


• At the Portland Expo Center antique show, people engross ...
The Oregonian - OregonLive.com, OR - Oct 27, 2008
Susan Gilbertson, 43, of Milwaukie was looking to fill out her elegant inheritance of Depression-era silverplate passed on by her grandmother. ...

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Rockwell raised expectations for the perfect Thanksgiving - The Herald-Times (subscription)


Rockwell raised expectations for the perfect Thanksgiving
The Herald-Times (subscription), IN - Nov 16, 2008
The dinner table had the sterling service, and cutlery was properly positioned while the Depression-era crystal glassware reflected off the English china. ...

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