Posted 2 years ago
famatta127
(124 items)
All Loetz ... part Mimosa, part Formosa with some Aeolus mixed in for good measure = this incredible work of art in glass.
Creative and innovative and well ahead of their time, the craftsman at Loetz would see this surface decoration influence the Moorish Crackle line by Victor Durand 25 years later. Some shots from the web to better illustrate the point. Special thanks to AlfredoVillanueva for the photo of the pink Mimosa and to Eddie Scheepers of Loetz.com for identifying the Mimosa line.
If These Shirts Could Talk: The Tantalizing Tales Behind Used Clothes
Jockeying for Position: How Boxers and Briefs Got Into Men's Pants
Gloriously Grotesque 19th-Century Pipes
In the Hot Seat: Is Your Antique Windsor a Fake?
Love at First Kite: How Pizza and Pente Led to One Oklahoman's High-Flying Obsession
Blood, Sweat, and Steel: My Afternoon with the Ace of Swords
'The Great Gatsby' Still Gets Flappers Wrong
Say Ahhh: An Oral Surgeon's Quest to Reimagine the Garage-Band Guitar
Forget TV Pickers, Meet the Real Mavericks of the Antiques World
Coveting The Craziest Cat-People Collectibles




just absolutely gorgeous
I see the Mimosa and Formosa, but where's the Aeolus?
Its more obvious when you handle it...just a generalization toward the layered threading.
Gotcha. Does it look like they started with Formosa first, then applied the Mimosa "crackling" or vice versa. Very interesting vase.
I know this is a late comment, Tony; but what about Astglas? It seems to me that the "variant" looks a lot like Astglas (1899-1900) and of course Mimosa. The variant is great, and I love the Aeolus too - great colors! The first one is very interesting, and definitely has the Formosa waves; beautiful!
So what is it that distinguishes Astglas from the rest?
Most Astglas has an underlay of Rusticana to it..really hard to describe without holding it...the crackle sort of sits atop the knots and grain of the Rusticana to make Astglas
for when you just can't make up your mind which dekor you are in the mood for :)
Thanks Tony!