Posted 7 months ago
Justanovice
(116 items)
Perhaps JayHow could verify if this piece is a Fenton basket? It has a number registration for 1970's! Many thanks!
The Killer Mobile Device for Victorian Women
Adrift in a sea of digital apps for every imaginable function, we often feel our needs are met better today than in any previous era. But consider the chatelaine, a device popularized in the 18th century that attached to the waist of a wo…
If These Shirts Could Talk: The Tantalizing Tales Behind Used Clothes
The mysterious packages kept arriving, some from eBay, others from the Home …
Gloriously Grotesque 19th-Century Pipes
The meerschaum pipes carved in Eastern Europe at the end of the 19th century are among the most bizarre and improbable concoctions in decorative art. Some feature …
In the Hot Seat: Is Your Antique Windsor a Fake?
While researching her book, "Killer Stuff and Tons of Money," Maureen Stanton came across all sorts of characters. For years, she shadowed her antiques-dealer friend …
Bizarro Beauty Products, from 1889 to Now
We tend to think of the union of vanity and technology as a particularly modern affliction. It's only recently that science brought the world botox and collagen injections, skin peels, liposucti…
Love at First Kite: How Pizza and Pente Led to One Oklahoman's High-Flying Obsession
Vintage kites from all over the world hang from the ceiling and walls of Richard Dermer’s popula…
Pin-Up Queens: Three Female Artists Who Shaped the American Dream Girl
It’s easy to think of pin-up art as a charming relic of the old boys’ club—images that might line the walls …
Say Ahhh: An Oral Surgeon's Quest to Reimagine the Garage-Band Guitar
It’s not unusual for men of a certain age to have a soft spot in their hearts for the look of vintage guitars and the sound…
Tokens for Sweethearts, in Times of War
A keepsake, an item that recognizes a loved one, strikes a deep, sentimental chord in each of us—particularly that of a sweetheart. The popularity of keepsakes grew in the United States during the period from 1917 to 1919 as our country ent…
American Picker Dream, Part I: Mike Wolfe On His Love Affair With Bikes
I was walking to school one day and saw all these bikes in the garbage. I was just amazed because I didn't have one and I found it incredible that anyone was throwing them out. So I gathered…
Fenton? | Fenton Glass29 of 330 |
Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate
Posted 7 months ago
Justanovice
(116 items)
Perhaps JayHow could verify if this piece is a Fenton basket? It has a number registration for 1970's! Many thanks!
Create an account or login in order to post a comment.
stunning , i would google it with the number:)
Thank you BELLIN68!
your very welcome Justanovice:)
Looovely colour!...:-)
Thank you inky!!
Hi! Very interesting and unusual piece. The following is not your basket, but it contains a description of a similar item, and it also refers to a book that might prove useful to you.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/RARE-GREENER-HOBNAIL-TWIN-HANDLE-AMBER-GLASS-BASKET-1890-/110964272603?pt=UK_Art_Glass&hash=item19d5fc6ddb
Thank you all so much, very much appreciated!
Hi, here's a link to the same basket. This is a definitely a Greener piece. The question remains whether or not Fenton reproduced your basket. I haven't seen the marks you refer to and don't know Fenton well enough to answer that question. Love the color and opalescence! Best wishes for success!
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Victorian-vaseline-pressed-glass-Henry-Greener-ware-blue-posy-basket-C1880s-/110963279038?pt=UK_Art_Glass&hash=item19d5ed44be
miKKoChristmas11 - Thank you very much for all your time and effort! I have had a look at the links and will continue to chase up any information. The basket has a registration number beginning with a 9 which puts it into the 70's era. But it is identical to the one in the link as to its form, so will get on and try to find out if Fenton did reproduce it. Thanks again miKKoChristmas11 for all your help!!
You're most welcome, Justanovice!! : )
miKKoChristmas this is a Henry Greener Victorian Vaseline glass posy bowl from approx 1880 - 1890's. The Registered number does not relate to the general metal and glassware registration numbers, (as I thought) but to Greener ware only (96945). I checked with the seller of the identical basket to compare the number and then looked at Greener ware. Would never have got there without a pointer in the right direction. Many thanks!
You're very welcome! You've got a very scarce treasure in this one! : )
Looks like Im a little too late to tell you this isnt Fenton. Just happened to see this while browsing along. Sorry I missed it when you were looking for the information. Arent the people on here great though, picked right up on it for you. Thats what I love about this site. Love the great basket too. Its beautiful. I cant get enough of the opalescent stuff! Bravo!
beautiful piece -- love the color and form!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thank you JayHow for your belated comment, it cannot be helped that we miss postings, especially when one is getting up and the other is going to bed due to our locations!!!:) But thank you again, and Yes people are great on this site and I love it too!!
Thank you epson233! - I am still chuckling about your comment on Bellin and the the eating of crackers!!! Gem!!
You are welcome. I need to get organized and take a few lessons from some othermembers here who seem to a much better job at keeping up on things....No excuses here though. Im a disorganized mess! But Im working on it. I bet you were elated to find out you had such a great basket though. Im going to do some reading on this later on just because it sparked an interest with me. Another glass company to maul over....Like I need more to add to my pee brain! haha
JayHow, just to add a little confusion, not long after I had attributed this basket to Greener, I saw on Twentieth Century Glass the very same one (same number) attributed to Davidson. So do not know what to think about that! If you turn anything up please let me know!¬)