Carnival Glass - A Legacy from the Rust Belt

All Carnival Glass from the Golden Age of Carnival (1907-1928) is iridescent pressed glass that was manufactured primarily in the United States, to compete with other American & European High-end Glass Firms, such as Tiffany and Steuben. One of the five major factories that manufactured original, antique Carnival Glass was Fenton in Wheeling West Virginia. Fenton, sadly closed their doors in 2011, after making glassware for over 106 years. The company is credited for being the very first factory to manufacture such glass, which was first called dope glass, rubigold glass and sometimes poison glass. Each individual piece was poured, moulded, tooled, shaped, re-fired and colored by a factory worker. It was a multi-step process, and the stunning colors that are enjoyed today, were produced by using dangerous chemicals such as cobalt, soda ashe, uranium, borax, as well as other poisonous and toxic materials. The men and yes, sometimes the children who crafted and handled the glass, were often subjected to a great many dangerous conditions, the likes of which would never be found in today’s manufacturing world, outside of a third-world country perhaps. The ruling aspects and necessities for any glass factory included chemicals, a water source, scorching hot furnaces that helped to shape and capture the glass treatments and finally and most importantly, manpower. The people who worked in the factories, for sometimes as little as $2.00 a day, were part of the great American manufacturing explosion in the area of the great Rust Belt, primarily West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Frank Fenton was soon joined by Harry Northwood, Thomas E. Dugan, the Millersburg Company (formed briefly by Frank’s brother John Fenton) and the Imperial Glass Company of Bellaire, Ohio as the five major firms to manufacture dope glass. There were other firms such as Westmoreland and Cambridge who were also making small amounts of the new iridescent glass, but nothing compared to the vast amount created by the "Fab Five." It should also be noted that only the Imperial Glass Company, because it was formed from a group of investors, seemed to have any semblance of “quality control,” making their glass arguably more consistant than the others. The new and exciting iridescent glass came in many forms, both utilitarian as well as for decoration. There’s no denying that life in the early 20th Century was pretty drab. Color itself was money; be it in paint, glass or textiles. Tiffany’s “Favrile Glass” was devised in a costly manor in which the iridescence was part of the glass itself, making the glassware astronomically expensive for the day. Frank Fenton and his contemporaries devised the technique, albeit a dangerous one, to simply “spray the iridescence on,” making iridescent glass very affordable to the working man and his family. Iridescent glass, because it catches the light, was a Godsend when it came to “brightening up a room.” Contrary to non-collector’s beliefs, the rainbow glass was extremely popular in the day and was purchased by every-day men and women, very much like any glassware you would find today at Macys. Ads for the glassware could also be found in a catalogue from companies such as Butler Brothers. Surprisingly, the glass itself wasn't transported safely at all by todays standards. The glass would always arrive at the local store by the dozens, stuffed into wooden barrels, with only straw as protection from the bumpy trains and carriages they must have endured.

Towards the end of the 1920’s as America was loosing it’s “roar” and was about to collide head-on with the Great Depression, the pretty glass fell out of favor and could no longer be afforded by the general public. With their factories full of glass, the surviving manufactures of the glassware were forced to sell their inventory off, well below cost. The glassware that had brightened working class homes for two decades was nearly forgotten and was eventually given away as prizes at carnivals and State Fairs. Yes, like a stuffed animal today, you could win your date a pretty piece of glass at the carnival shooting galleries and spinning wheels. Years passed and in the 1950’s the American glass collector woke up and began taking a huge interest in the old glass. With the history of the glassware in mind, the name Carnival Glass stuck. Soon, thanks to glass historians like Marion Hartung, the long arduous process of calculating Carnival Glass, along with its hundreds of patterns, individual makers, skads of different colors and complete, true history, had begun. To this day, some patterns are attributed to specific firms, simply by what glass shards were found at what factory site. It was not an exact science and some patterns and makers are still argued over by experts and glass historians. Many antique glass dealers and buyers look down on the pretty glass as nothing more than "poor man's Tiffany," and still to this day, do not consider it a true antique. As a glass collector who smiles on the glassware, I bite my tongue and save my impertinence for such autocratic bores because I know that there is no denying that Carnival Glass is pure, classic Americana with a rich history and a beautiful, haunting past. No two pieces are ever the same.

With the end of the Golden Age of Carnival Glass, also ends my interest as a collector in American-made pressed glass. With the Great Depression’s demand for less manpower and more machines, the art of hand-made pressed glass came to a grinding halt. Depression era glass is very pretty indeed, but the majority was all machine-made so at least for this collector, it snuffs out the magic. Fortunately, some European countries caught on and began manufacturing small amounts of Carnival Glass and in the late 1920's early 1930's, the wave of Carnival Glass finally washed up on the shores of Australia.  Crown Crystal of Australia, began manufacturing whole lines of amazing Carnival Glass that are considered rare and highly collectible right alongside the American Carnival from decades before it.  One can only hope that the magic of Carnival Glass will be coveted forever.  Carnival Glass contains magic. From a collector’s viewpoint, the greatest and most expensive Carnival Glass has more color, more magic and more allure. It does seem true what they say; “either you get it or you don’t” and if you do actually “get it” and you believe that you've been bitten by the Carnival bug, chances are you’ll be buying a piece soon and then you'll be wanting more. 

The Carnival Collector is an odd one indeed and by saying that, I’m speaking for myself! My first piece of Carnival wasn't an old piece at all. It was a contemporary Imperial cobalt blue Aurora Jewels Leaf Vase that was responsible for starting me on my way. I purchased it years ago at a friend's antique shop in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. I just thought it “looked cool.” For years I would gawk at the vase, I would hold it and feel the alligator-like glass texture on the outside and gaze at the oil-slick rainbow interior. I wanted to know more about it and I found myself always thinking the same thing; “how the heck did they make this?” The Leaf Vase was okay - there was no magic yet, but I was intrigued nonetheless. I eventually sat down with my sister Susan at her computer and discovered that the mark on the bottom of the vase stood for the Imperial Glass Company, and what I had was something called “Carnival Glass.”

I wanted more. I wanted more but I didn’t have a clue about what I was buying. My interest began to grow, but my addictive personality began to steer me towards a collector’s disaster. I forgot one important thing - research. I still had no idea what Carnival Glass was. Other than it being darned pretty and rainbow colored, who cared! Foolishly, I was breaking a cardinal rule- I was buying blind. Out of nowhere, in a few months time, my tiny apartment was filled with Carnival Glass. I procured every piece I could find. I had all different colors and shapes, toothpick holders, covered butter dishes, compotes - and all with that nifty “IG” mark, stamped on the bottom! At one point, I had four Imperial Luster Rose covered butter dishes, in purple, marigold, white and green. For me, it “had to be Imperial” and if it was, it “had to have that mark.” I had no idea that I had purchased an apartment-full of Contemporary Carnival Glass. Now, some say there are no coincidences, but what happened next was pretty odd. I was shopping in the streets of my neighborhood in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, where there always seems to be a street sale on the weekends. One guy had an assortment of books for sale - they were strewn on a blanket. I looked down and next to the sharpie-written sign reading “books $2,” I saw what I wanted. In a sea of David Grishams, Rolling Stones bio mags and countless paperback romance novels, sat a book titled, “The Standard Encyclopedia of Carnival Glass Revised Third Edition” by Bill Edwards. I laid down my $2 and off I ran home to devour the book. I was amazed by the old patterns and how many there were. The old glass was spectacular and I wanted to read more. Next it was a Warman’s Carnival Glass Guide that cemented my now insatiable appetite for Carnival Glass. Unfortunately, the Warman's Carnival Glass Guide isn’t the best for new buyers. I can't really recommend it because I found it way too confusing and compared to the Standard Encyclopedia, vastly incomplete. It did however, have some of the most breath-taking photos of Carnival Glass I had ever seen. I had just joined eBay, where I discovered their huge Carnival collecting community and soon, my first old, antique piece of Carnival Glass had arrived at my apartment.

Eventually, I managed to sell all of my contemporary Imperial glass at a sad loss. Growing in its place however, was a collection of old glass, including some Fenton, Northwood and a real piece of Imperial, because I now knew the difference. I finally knew that there was a huge difference between old and newer Carnival Glass, and I knew the difference in price as well. The Carnival Glass with the “allure” was really expensive! It was my goal from then on, to figure out all the differences and nuances and to continue my research, which eventually lead me to EAPG, Opalescent and Stretch Glass. The rest brings me to today, where I still live in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. I have a rather large collection of Carnival Glass and have been buying and selling on eBay now for nearly nine years. I am writing this blog and dedicating it to you – the new buyer who might just now be falling in love with Carnival Glass. It is my intention, not to speak as an expert, but as someone with a great love and admiration for the long hours, sweat and passion that went into creating this great American glassware. It is my hope that I can guide you along the way and to help you stay on the right path and to not make the mistakes I made in the past. If you’re still reading this, then that means you’ll probably want to continue reading the rest of the blog. I have compiled a good deal of information for you, information that might make collecting more rewarding and less confusing, so here we go.

The "Good Stuff"
The old Carnival Glass patterns varied from ordinary and simple rays, panels and flutes, to more elaborate patterns that were often geometric in nature, and others still that reflected the fashion of the day. As Art Nouveau gave way to the Art Deco styling of the 1920’s, both styles are beautifully reflected in Carnival Glass. For Carnival’s Art Nouveau period, the patterns would sometimes contain peacocks and other animals such as lions and panthers, floral designs and bucolic scenes, such as Imperial’s Homestead and Double Dutch. Grapes were also an enormously popular theme, giving way to Northwood’s ingenious pattern, Grape & Cable. Fenton too had a Grape & Cable line, but their stroke of genius came with their Orange Tree pattern line, which, like Northwood’s Grape & Cable, was made for years and in nearly every form imaginable. Imperial had two grape pattern’s Imperial Grape and Heavy Grape, while Dugan had several grape patterns including Grape Delight and Golden Grape. Millersburg was only inexistence for a few years and seemed to steer clear of grape motifs. It seems that their Deep Grape compotes were the companies sole contribution to the grape craze and it shows. If you came across a Deep Grape compote, it would be worth anywhere from $1,000 to $10,000 in the collector’s world. The scarcity of Millersburg’s glass usually brings a premium. Millersburg was also the first responsible for the manufacture of “Radium Glass,” which was a form of dope glass with a shiny, high-gloss, oil-slick appearance. Many of Carnival's Deco-style pieces seem to have this astonishingly beautiful finish, such as Imperial's Scroll Embossed. Other Deco pattern's include Northwood's Tornado vases, Fenton's Peacock Tail and Dugan's Ski Star.

Color, Condition, Pattern and Rarity
Color, Condition, Pattern and Rarity all play factors in determining what a piece is worth. Antique carnival can be rather expensive and to find pieces for little money is always a score, but beware - read up on the differences so you know before you buy. Flea market sellers are known for fudging because they don't know the difference themselves. I go through all of this below, but if you see a piece with a makers mark on the base or inside, chances are, it's going to be new. All marked Fenton pieces are new, as are most marked Imperial pieces. There are only a few marks on antique glass that you should know about before buying and they are Northwood's mark of an "N" in a circle, Imperial's Iron Cross mark and another firm, Cambrige Glass Company's mark was "Near Cut." If you find a piece that has any of these marks, chances are, you have a piece of antique Carnival Glass and if you ever come across a piece marked "NuART," well then, you can retire or at least send the kids to college. Seriously, the "NuArt" mark is another early Imperial mark that can be sometimes seen on Imperial show-stoppers such as Chrysanthemum and Homestead chop plates. They are both stunning, very expensive and quite hypnotic. I tell everyone that if you see a piece that just kind of ‘sits there,” then chances are, it's not valuable or it's contemporary. If you see a piece of iridescent glass and it’s real and old, you may find yourself thinking, "whoa, what is that. . .how did they make that?"

Here's a sampling of the Five Major Carnival Glass manufacturers. Enjoy!


Northwood - "Fruits & Flowers" in Green with Periwinkle Iridescence.


Fenton - "Orange Tree" with Trunk Center in White with Ice Blue Iridescence.



Imperial "Beaded Bullseye" in Electric Purple.



Dugan "Honeycomb & Beads" in Black Amethyst.



Millersburg "Courthouse" Rare Ice Cream Shaped Bowl in Amethyst.


Are you Ready for More?
 I am so pleased to finally offer this video for Beginners & Seasoned collectors alike.  This is nearly a complete library of the incredible colors created during the Golden Age of Carnival Glass.  All pieces were photographed by me, and all pieces are and/or were part of my collection of antique Carnival Glass.  I hope that this video will inspire & teach you about some of the colors that were created between 1907 & the mid-1920's.  Carnival Glass continues to be American's greatest kept Secret.  Well now the cat's out of the bag!  Enjoy & Keep Reading!


Colors in Carnival Glass


Know What You're Buying
The average flea market vendor tends to be negative towards selling Carnival Glass. They will tell you it’s because they just don’t like it or it breaks all the time, but I think the real deal with their disparagement of the glassware, lies with their lack of knowledge. Many people simply cannot tell the difference between old and new Carnival, and don’t understand the huge difference in price. I can see why this would be infuriating and I can tell you from personal experience that Carnival Glass is a haggler’s nightmare. When a seller doesn’t understand the many factors that go into grading Carnival and when they think that their blue Indiana Hostess Plate is worth $180, it’s a good time to turn around and run the other way. The hardest thing for new collectors, is determining the difference between Antique and Contemporary Carnival Glass, and just plain iridescent crap glass. “Iridescent, crap glass you say?” Yes that’s what I said. There is a bevy of el crap-ola iridescent glass in the world, all of which I’m going to force you to look at right now. Believe me, it’s for your own good. Please familiarize yourself with these pieces of glass, which seem better suited to cleaning out the cat box than brightening the home. While you're looking, I want you to repeat, over and over again that "it's not Carnival Glass." None of it is.

Worthless Iridescent Glass


This putrid piece of trash is supposed to be some semblance of a bread basket. Who would eat out of this? It looks like a basketweave-propelled spacecraft out of the original Star Trek. These terrible amber glass baskets however, seem to breed worse than Tribbles. They are everywhere. Avoid!



Well just get out the lemonade, deviled eggs, fantasia salad and turn up the Debbie Boone while your at it. I mean, come on. These floral condament dishes are trying so hard to be the real thing, but just look at it. It needs a Pet Rock and a Virginia Slim. This is terrible glassware.


Beware of this next guy. These little dishes, which seem to be custom made for a Thanksgiving cranberry sauce right out of the can, are well known imposters in the Carnival Glass world. They were made in Amber almost exclusively, and are known as Loganberry dishes. They can trick you however, because many come with extraordinary radium iridescence. It’s not Carnival Glass. . .


Here's another flea market table-filler. I see at least two or three of these at every market I go to. They always seem to come equipped with a sad piece of masking tape, reading "Carnival Glass $1" written on it. Trouble is, that it's not even worth that and dag-nabbit, it's not Carnival Glass! There are other pieces out there that hopefully your eye can now spot with more ease. Just back away from it - it's worthless. What's worse is that these pieces are what most non-collectors "think" Carnival Glass is. So never forget these pale, sad imposters. They are everywhere and not worth a dime. Here's the phrase to remember, in case you'd rather forget these photos: "All Carnival Glass is iridescent but not all iridescent glass is Carnival."

Contemporary Carnival Glass
In the 1950s, right around the same time that the experts were coining the name “Carnival Glass” and collectors had begun to form clubs, Fenton and Imperial were both still manufacturing glass. Both decided to give their subsequent iridescent lines a second chance and Carnival Glass was born again. Both companies brought back familiar old patterns from the Golden Age to try out on the new collectors. Imperial brought back their Imperial Grape line, as well as Scroll Embossed, but managed a whole slew of new patterns as well. Fenton not only brought back some of their prized patterns like Fantail and Diamond Point Column vases but they had also succeeded in procuring multiple old pattern moulds from Northwood, Dugan and the others over the years and began reproducing those as well. That’s the reason why a shopper might come across a Hearts & Flowers bowl, originally a Northwood pattern, but marked with the Fenton Logo. Same with Dugan’s Farmyard and Westmoreland’s Carolina Dogwood. This is one to remember: "If it’s marked with a logo besides Northwood’s, chances are it is a Contemporary reproduction."

Other contemporary Carnival Glass companies include L.G. Wright, Summit, Smith Glass Co, Boyd and yes, Westmoreland themselves – they too reproduced Carnival Glass with their familiar “WG” logo. Indiana Glass Company of Indiana, Pennsylvania is responsible for an enormous amount of contemporary Carnival Glass and theirs is usually not marked, but it too looks completely different from the Antique originals. "Indiana Glass,” as it is often called, is excessively bright and shiny as far as color is concerned and overly flashy, nearly metallic. Some folks like it. I’ve never been a fan, especially when that seller at the market is still asking $180 for that Indiana Hostess Plate. In reality, the Indiana Hostess Plate, regardless of the color, is usually worth between $10 and 18.00. It should also be noted that most contemporary red Carnival Glass looks nothing like the original red (predominately produced in the Golden Age by Fenton). Old red Carnival Glass is usually rich, textured and on the darker side of a cherry red, while the contemporary reds almost always resemble a bright, shiny candied apple. Keep in mind that Contemporary Carnival Glass is rarely worth the expensive prices that old antique Carnival Glass commands. Don't ever over-pay for a newer piece! Most new pieces are extremely affordable. 







Don’t get me wrong – there’s nothing wrong with newer, contemporary Carnival Glass. Some newer Carnival is stunning and awe-inspiring. Once at the Chelsea flea market in Manhattan, I found a contemporary Fenton Carolina Dogwood bowl in electric purple. The dealer wanted $40 for the bowl, but I didn’t have enough cash. I ran across the street to the ATM, but when I arrived back at the dealer’s table, he had sold it to another customer for $50 while I was gone. Word of advice in the flea market world: If you want to buy an item but have to get more money first, always leave a down-payment of some monetary value with the dealer before you go to a bank or ATM. It’s insurance if nothing else that the item will be yours when you return.

One should hope that contemporary Carnival Glass won’t be going anywhere. Fenton themselves, had actually reported the closing of their factory back in 2007, but a swift turn around, coupled with plenty of Fenton sales on television shows such as QVC and HSN, helped to keep Fenton alive and creating new American made glassware for collectors, both new and old alike. Many Fenton contemporary Carnival pieces often are hand painted and signed by the artist as well. Fenton shapes never seem to end, and with their menagerie of bears, songbirds and the like, one can only hope that Fenton will be around a long, long time. Just be sure you know what you are buying before you put your money down!

Pssst. . .pssst. . .
So. . .are you hooked yet?  Thought so.  There's more info below, but in the mean-time, if you are on Facebook, I'm also the administrator for the Keystone Carnival Glass Club.  Please come by and "Like" our page.  There are many other Carnival Club pages on Facebook, including Tampa Bay, New England, Texas, Mid-Atlantic and the ICGA, just to name a few.  Be sure to go inside the actual page and click the big "LIKE" button at the top right of the page.  There's always tons of photos and information. 

More Rare & Desirable Glass from the "Golden Age"
Okay, back to more of the "good stuff."  Why so expensive?  Here's why.  Rarity, Color, Shape and Condition.  Rarity is a huge factor, when determining the value of a piece of antique Carnival.  While "beauty" lies in the eyes of the beholder, if there's nothing to behold, you have nothing to look at, right?  Some pieces of Carnival were made in such scant numbers, that Carnival Glass organizations and clubs have their whereabouts well documented.  Remember, that no two pieces are ever the same, so get ready for the "Carnival Glass Value roller coaster."  Okay.  If you take the rarity of a certain pattern, find that rare pattern in a rare color, or in a rare shape or size that nobody has ever seen before, then you are adding and adding to the value of your piece.  If the condition is excellent, suddenly your original "rare" piece just became a Carnival treasure and collectors want it and will pay anything they can to pry it out of your hands!  Believe me, if you've never been to a Carnival Glass convention or auction, you are really missing out.  More on Carnival Glass clubs later, but for now lets continue to examine more of the extremes of the "Carnival Glass Value Roller Coaster" just for a moment.  

We will use Fenton's "Chrysanthemum" as the example.  Fenton's Chrysanthemum is a busy, but very appealing Carnival pattern.  With bold chrysanthemum blossoms as its main focal point, Fenton mixes in bucolic notes of pastoral windmills, mountains and even a lake with boats!  The example below is a standard blue Chrysanthemum three-footed ICS bowl, with gorgeous iridescence.  You might see "ICS" a lot if you're looking for Carnival Glass online.  ICS stands for "Ice Cream Shaped" and will always refer to bowls with perfectly round edges, as opposed to bowls with perhaps, a ruffled edge.   This particular example can be bought at auction for anywhere between $60 and $200.00, depending on who's bidding and how badly they want it.  The same pattern in marigold, amethyst or green, demands roughly the same price, perhaps a bit lower or higher, depending on how spectacular the iridescent color treatment is.

However. . . 

If you have the same Chrysanthemum pattern in red?  That would most likely propel the value of your bowl past the $3,000.00 mark.  Literally.  Red is a very desirable color and is "not often seen" in Chrysanthemum bowls.

Fenton blue "Chrysanthemum" ICS footed bowl

The following are a few examples that are considered rare, very desirable or both.   Interesting that they are all rare for different reasons.  I am looking to expand this section.  If you have any Carnival glass piece that you believe is rare or scarce, please send me a sharable photo to the email at the end of this blog so I can continue my expansion. . .


Fenton Marigold "Dragon & Strawberry" Always very desirable.


Fenton Blue "Peter Rabbit" collar based bowl.  Gorgeous and rare in any color or shape (photo courtesy of Beth Freiman).  
US Glass White "Field Thistle" breakfast creamer.  This pattern has rarely been documented in White in this shape.


Imperial "Homestead" chop plate in Electric Amber.  Always in high demand.  Look for the "Nuart" mark on the front but beware if there's a mark on the exterior base, it's a reproduction (see glass marks above).
Northwood Lime Green "Rose Show" plate.  Not considered "rare," Poppy & Rose Show pieces are always in demand however, and collectors continue to pay top dollar for them.  This is a stunning example of Lime Green.  (photo courtesy of Beth Freiman).  


This blog is to be continued with more information on collecting the "Good Stuff." Please look for it in the near future! I will attempt to cover the makers, patterns and just as importantly, all of the magical colors of old, antique Carnival Glass. I also hope to cover some of the European Carnival Glass manufacturers and the incredible world of Australian Carnival. Until then, happy hunting!

Attend a Carnival Glass Convention - They're a Blast!
 
Tom Burns Auctions, Tampa Bay Carnival Glass Club 2014

Notes to Readers:

- I am happy to help identify your Carnival Glass pattern/item.  Please send clear photos and any other comments, directly to my email at amongthecollectors@gmail.com.

- Check out some of my Carnival Glass & other Collectibles on eBay under my username, glassdaze65.

- For more information on Carnival Glass, here are some wonderful sites!
http://www.ddoty.com/
http://carnivalglass101.carnivalheaven.com/

Comments

  1. Its like you read my mind! You seem to know so much about this, like you wrote the book in it or something. I think that you can do with a few pics to drive the message home a little bit, but other than that, this is great blog. A fantastic read. I'll definitely be back.
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  2. I'm still learning from you, while I'm improving myself. I definitely liked reading all that is written on your website.Keep the aarticles coming. I loved it!
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  3. Loved the description of worthless irridescent glass - now that was priceless! Wish you'd given even more examples.

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  4. Thanks Diana, I will have more pictures up soon. I just found out that a friend was "surprising me" with a big ugly, green "Indiana Fruit" oval bowl. I will soon have more images, including the bicentennial garbage. My friend texted me with a picture of a Liberty Bell plate, telling me that "they wanted $20 for it." I told her to put it down immediately. I might have to start an entire new blog on crap glass!

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  5. Thank you so much! I do still enjoy some of the pitcho-leave it aloneo glassware, but I will now be wary thanks to you. Now I do have a question. I am quite certain I bought a Carnival Glass lamp. but I can't find any markings on it. I have yet to clean it up so maybe there is somewhere on the brass part of the fixture I should look. I LOVE it anyways even if its not anything special. Bought on kijiji it was a 3 hour drive and $300 but worth it. I suspect it's a Pittsburgh Glass Co lamp. based on photos I've seen on Ruby Lane. But for my own mind I wanted to be able to identify what it is. Grace

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  6. Any mark that could clarify the marker and pattern of the glass lamp, would be on the lip or somewhere on the glass shade, not the physical lamp. Many Imperial carnival glass lamp shades can be found marked with the "NUART" mark. Most others unfortunately, are not marked but if you send me a photo or two, to the email above, I'll have a look at them.

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  7. I have a piece that looks to be a candy dish/lid with grapes, & leaves it has a few small lines coming of the leaves that to me look like tiny vines. The top edge is a wavy pattern. The grape, leaf,and tiny vine design is around the dish and around the top of lid (outer part of lid is about, inch and a quarter thick), then there is a small 1/2 inch plain pattern then raised a bit in the middle with a leaf patten and the "knob" is a grape... The candy dish feels like it weighs 1-2 lbs(maybe lil over 2 lbs w/lid). The top edge is a wavy pattern the bottom edge of dish is plain round..color resembles that of car oil mixed with water..colors are blue-green-purple-and gold tint. There is no serial number or name on it and when I hold it up to a light bulb the rainbow color disappears and the glass appears to be a semi-transparent or translucent pale green. What are your thoughts on it being real or fake?

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    1. Hi, without a picture it would be difficult to tell. Please send me a picture to the email listed above and I'll see if I can help, although I don't believe that there were any old Carnival dishes with a "knob" of grapes. I believe I know the item of which you speak however, and if it is what I believe it is, it's a contemporary covered dish from the 1970's. For the record, the term "fake" is usually set aside only for pieces that are made to deliberately "deceive" the buyer into thinking that a piece is something that it is not. I believe in your case, it would suffice it to say it is "contemporary."

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  8. I forgot the bottom stem/base has 2 grapes, one each on opposite sides of base, then 2 leaves, one each on opposite side of base.

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    1. I responded to your email, I hope you received it. Regards, Daniel

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  9. Organized and well written blog. Thumbs up!

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    1. Thank you very much! From one glassie to another, it's appreciated!

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  10. I love this blog so much same as the blog of interior glass doors, so better to keep on posting!

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    Replies
    1. Thank you so much for your kind words, I will continue to update. Look for new additions coming soon!

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  11. I simply want to tell you that I am just newbie to blogging and site-building and really savored this blog site. Probably I’m want to bookmark your site . You definitely come with wonderful articles. Appreciate it for sharing your website page.
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    Replies
    1. Thank you very much, Courtney. I'm glad you are enjoying the blog!

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    1. Thank you very much for reading and commenting! I do hope to have this blog extended this summer to include chapters on color and a detailed article about Carnival Glass clubs, which are the heart & soul of the Carnival Glass collector world! Dan

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  13. Hello, thanks for your patience. If you have the glass all together, please email me a pic or two, so I can assess the collection. I will of course help you where I can. My email is pourboy65@gmail.com. Thanks for writing! Dan

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  14. And I hope that your friend has some of the "good stuff!"

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  15. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  16. Hi,
    Thanks for the sharing of such information. we will pass it on to our readers. This is a great reading. Thanking you


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  17. Just wanted to refresh my memory with all your great insight on Carnival glass. I was bitten by the bug, now addicted, and have learned many of the things you describe above. I love it though, and have now amassed a small fortune in true antique carnival glass. I keep adding guides, encyclopedias and books to my reference material and have bought and sold a good number of great glass items on EBay. Some of it is even contemprary, but I find I like some of those pieces enough to keep as well. Thanks again!

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    1. Thanks for taking the time to write me, Jan! Please share and keep coming back for more. Have you attended a convention yet? They are a lot of fun! Dan

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  18. We have a carnival glass set (Pitcher, 4 glasses, bowl & plate but can't find a makers mark. It is iridescent blue, has clusters of grapes & leaves. She has a plate that is the same color, with a starburst and cut glass look going out to a fluted edge. Another plate is more clear in color but iridescent with 2 large grapes, leaves & a grape cluster. Any ideas? It is my Nana's (100 years old now) and we believe it to be from around the 50 or 60's. Any help that anyone would have to offer would be appreciated!!!! Thank you!!!!!

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    1. Hi Holly, it would be impossible to tell without seeing pictures. Please send some pics to amongthecollectors@gmail.com. I'll get back to you! Dan

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  19. Watched your video on the colors of Carnival Glass. It was beautifully done and must have taken quite a bit of time to achieve the results. Thank you for sharing.

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  20. Hi ~ Your Memphis without the stopper is misidentified, it's not Northwood and it's not Memphis.

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  21. You do get it Dan, Carnival glass IS magic! You really took me back to some of my best memories. I was a carney back in the 70s and I saw some of the most beautiful pieces under the lights of the midway as the sound of nickels, dimes & quarters bounced from one to another. Many a mark thought it was just cheap glass back then but it was always special for me to stop at the glass pitch to try for a new piece on my way back to my joint. Sadly over the years between kids and my husbands job moving us around, most is gone now. Thank you for seeing the beauty within each piece and the rich history of how it came to be. Happy collecting!

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    1. Sorry I'm just seeming this, Marry. Thank you for the kind words! Dan

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  22. What a well scripted blog. I came onto your blog just to find out a bit more about a piece I had. But, instead you got me enthralled in the whole collection. From now on, everytime I go to a market, I will end up having the urge to seek out Carnival Glass. And the dodgy ones.

    Vicki

    ReplyDelete
  23. What a well scripted blog. I came onto your blog just to find out a bit more about a piece I had. But, instead you got me enthralled in the whole collection. From now on, everytime I go to a market, I will end up having the urge to seek out Carnival Glass. And the dodgy ones.

    Vicki

    ReplyDelete
  24. What company made the first one pictured(solo flower in center) on the blog? My mother had one with the exact same pattern that was broken when they remodeled. I would like to surprise her and try and find a replacement that is very similar. I know this is an old post but it is worth a shot to put a smile on my moms face. Thank you in advance!

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    1. Hello Jay, the very first photo in the article is "Apple Blossom Twigs" by Dugan. Thanks for writing! Dan

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  25. I have a hen on nest that has a basket weave bottom. It is mostly a purple/blue carnival glass look on the outside, but the inside is solid blue. Is this fake, or were the insides of covered dishes sometimes made in a solid color? Loved the info!

    Thanks

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  26. I have a vase that is marked as Imperial on the bottom, but I cannot find the pattern and the approximate year of its making. It is a footed vase in amethyst or purple, triangular in shape, and it has a line of larger drops that run from the top down and to the end of the foot on each of the three corners. There is a space on each side of this line and then a line of smaller drops runs down on either side of the larger drops. Then there is quite a space (a side of the triangle) that is textured until the next corner which is described above. This pattern is around the vase. The top edge of the vase is a rounded saw-tooth type on the straight stretches and then there is an upward rounded edge at each corner. The three feet are rounded as well. The underside of the vase goes upward into the vase in a triangular shape and the Imperial mark is in the middle. I should send you a picture, but I don't know how.

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  27. This is the first time I have read any articles on Carnival Glass. You are hilarious thank you very much I needed a good laugh.
    L.

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  28. I hope you are still taking e-mails. I have a few questions about my vase! Awesome blog btw! Lots of info :)

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    1. Yes, I reply to emails sent to: amongthecollectors@gmail.com. A Thousand pardons if it takes me a while to get back, I'm dancing as fast as I can!

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  29. I've only been collecting for about 7 years, but while reading your blog, it was like going back in time and recalling very similar events like grabbing every piece of CG I saw, clueless to value. I wish I'd have read this wonderful tool beforehand! Thanks for providing this priceless info for all of us "Carnival addicts"!

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    1. You're very welcome! Sorry for the delay, I was moving and changing my life up! Stay healthy!

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  30. Your blog was very informative my husband started me collecting about 5 years ago with 90 pieces his father collects it too. I started buying all the patterns I could regardless of color they were amazed at all the patterns I was buying off of ebay. They only bought there pieces from garage sales or local auctions. I had the advantage that they new what was new. I was able to get a mentor off of ebay and she (julie) was able to teach me about color. I started out feeling guilty if I bought a $40 dollar piece then a $100 piece then a $500 piece then $1000 then 2000 and 3000 it is very addictive . When your collecting glass it is alot better than collecting shoes or purses it is an investment that you can enjoy.

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    1. Agreed. It's a very addictive hobby but like you said, it's an investment! Happy carnival hunting, stay healthy!

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