Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Old green bottle

In Bottles > Show & Tell.
Popular items this month0 of 0
4
Love it
0
Like it

blunderbuss2blunderbuss2 loves this.
iggyiggy loves this.
CaperkidCaperkid loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
See 2 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 7 years ago

    Mrstyndall
    (912 items)

    I have had this bottle for a long time. It is a dark green with a large Pontil at bottom. Does anyone recognize this type of bottle and what age it might have. It is very thick and well made.

    logo
    Bottles
    See all
    BALL 1/2 HALF PINT BLUE MASON Jar ~ Antique Zinc Lid
    BALL 1/2 HALF PINT BLUE MASON Jar ~...
    $9
    Vintage Medicine Hand Crafted Bottle, Snake Oil, Doc Holiday,Tombstone AZ,(COPY)
    Vintage Medicine Hand Crafted Bottl...
    $20
    BALL HALF 1/2 PINT BLUE MASON Jar
    BALL HALF 1/2 PINT BLUE MASON Jar "...
    $15
    Vintage Medicine Hand Crafted Bottle, Snake Oil, Dr. Kelloggz (Copy)
    Vintage Medicine Hand Crafted Bottl...
    $20
    logo
    BALL 1/2 HALF PINT BLUE MASON Jar ~ Antique Zinc Lid
    BALL 1/2 HALF PINT BLUE MASON Jar ~...
    $9
    See all

    Comments

    1. SpiritBear, 7 years ago
      My guess is you're mistaking a kick-up (typical even on modern wine-bottles) for a pontil, as a pontiled wine should have an applied ring on the lip, whereas yours is too perfect to be applied. It's either tooled (the ring) or machine made (I'm guessing the former).
      The colour is very light and is in higher quality (thus thinner) glass, also suggesting that it is newer. I'm guessing American-made, 1890s into the 1910s.
    2. Mrstyndall Mrstyndall, 7 years ago
      Spiritbear, thanks for the info! I did not know that the bottom was called a kick-up.
    3. SpiritBear, 7 years ago
      That great high-point that reaches up inside the bottle is a kick-up, seen almost solely in wine bottles. I used to know the reasoning around it but have since forgotten. I think it has to do with the separation of solids from the liquid itself.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.