With its magical sparkle and classic beauty, there's really nothing quite like antique cut glass. Your grandma's china cabinet was probably full of it, and if you're like many of us, you inherited ...
Have you ever been rummaging through your grandma's attic or perusing a flea market and stumbled upon a beautiful piece of glassware? You know, the kind that makes you pause and think, "Wow, this is ...
There's something about pink vintage glassware that just feels extra special. When you're deep into a day of thrifting, wondering why anyone bought a puking cat gravy boat the first time around, let ...
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Is it a collectible? How do you identify glassware patterns? What antique glassware brands should you be ...
You’ll find depression glass in nearly every antique store, but that doesn’t mean these historical pieces are easy to come by. Created during the Great Depression, this affordable yet beautifully ...
Not many people know this, but before WWII, large amounts of decorative glass were made in Indiana. The Indiana Glass Company, located in Dunkirk north/northeast of Muncie, manufactured what we now ...
The bright white milk glass bud vase that has stood quietly on your mother’s kitchen shelf since the 1950s is actually an object with a history that dates to the Italian Renaissance era. In fact, milk ...
Many antique lovers ask me about glass of all types: Murano, Depression, Early American Pattern Glass, American Brilliant and Pyrex — and the list goes on. One of the most popular and exciting glass ...
In the 1930s, small colorful glass dishes were given away as premiums for purchasing sacks of flour or boxes of oatmeal or detergent. Well padded in the flour, a sturdy glass cup or bowl would survive ...