This popular tour of sumptuous glass colors, decorative treatments, and forms (from baskets and bowls to sandwich trays and vases) produced by the famous Fenton Art Glass Company is back in a new edition, complete with new values for collectors. More than 840 color images provide a visual feast of the company's popular products, plus rare, unlisted, and experimental items. A brief history of the West Virginia company, listings of factory ware and mold numbers, a chronicle of the various colors p...
Wheeling Glass 1829-1939
by Gary E Baker, Kenneth Wilson, Jane Shadel Spillman, James S Measell, Holly Hoover McCluskey, and G Eason Eige
During the Great Depression, glass companies turned to machine made methods to produce inexpensive, colorful glass for the table and kitchen. Green was a popular color for this glassware and its popularity is very evident today among collectors. This book, the first of its kind to extensively cover only Depression Era green glass, contains over 250 color photographs illustrating a wide variety of pieces. Examples of forty-six patterns and brief histories of the glass companies are included, alon...
I Love The Smell Of Risk Analysis In The Morning
by Journals Factory
The Glass Industry in Sandwich is a five volume series of books presenting a factual account of glass produced by the glass companies that were located in Sandwich, Massachusetts, between 1825 and 1922. Included are color photos of over 2300 Sandwich glass objects that have been thoroughly researched and authenticated by Sandwich glass experts Raymond E. Barlow and Joan E. Kaiser, who have worked together for twenty-two years. Recognized by the antiques industry as the "Bible" in its field, this...
The two Josiah Spodes, father and son, may be justly regarded as the second most important names in the development of English ceramics. Under their direction, two of the most important products in the English ceramic repertoire were perfected: underglaze transfer printing on earthenware; and fine bone china, a very practical porcelain. The first set the stage for the enormous burgeoning of the transfer-printed trade which became known as 'Staffordshire Blue', including the Willow Patter and Blu...
Miller's Perfume Bottles
by Madeleine Marsh, Linda Bee, and Lynda Brine
This work on perfume bottles is aimed at the budding collector. Covering both non-commercial bottles, into which perfume was decanted, and commercial perfume bottles, sold complete with perfume, this book explores the variety of designs available. It includes silver-topped Victorian examples, Lalique glass, designs by such names as Guerlain, Chanel and Avon, men's aftershave bottles and the avant-garde creations of Jean-Paul Gaultier.
Toujours France (Travel Lovers Lined Blank Journal, #1)
by New Nomads Press
Distance Learning in the Art of Ceramic Repair and Restoration
by Mary Rose Wrangham
For thousands of years humans have adorned themselves. Adornment figures among the constellation of traits that signify the arrival of modern human behavior in the archaeological record. Werever they ventured, wherever they lived, people have made art and adorments to accompany them in life and death. In this book, artist William Morris celebrates this ancient and universal human quality and continues his exploration of the themes of origin and myth that permeate all his work. At first glance, t...
This book celebrates Scapes, a gloriously colorful, dynamic new body of work in glass imagined and executed by siblings Laura de Santillana and Alessandro Diaz de Santillana. In addition to having a family history anchored in the traditions of glassmaking in Murano, Italy, both are respected artists in the international Studio Glass movement and have enjoyed successful solo careers. This book celebrates their first collaboration.The art in Scapes is inspired by Hindu cosmology. Alessandro's glas...
Collecting Contemporary Ceramics
by Philip Hughes, Judy Dames, Andrew Renton, and Bryony Dawkes
A fascinating and insightful look into the art glass of the 1950s, this revised second edition spans the range of 1950s art glass from common collectibles to those of museum quality, displaying the diversity and creativity of style, color, and shape. This book has served as an inspiration and valuable resource for collectors, dealers, and all struck by the exceptional quality of art glass. Special emphasis is given to Italian (Murano) glass and Scandinavian glass, with an expanded section on Ame...