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Depression glass patterns range from simple to ornate, but whatever the pattern, their beauty sparkles just as brightly today ...
Fire-King’s Turquoise Depression Glass was primarily made between the 1940s and 1960s, offering everything from serving dishes and dinner plates to mixing bowls and cups. Hazel Atlas Blue Royal ...
Carnival refers to elaborate impressed patterns on multicolor iridescent bowls and plates. In contrast, each item of true Depression glass had a single glass color, usually translucent ...
Prices of Depression-era glass varies widely, depending on the scarcity of the pattern. The Adts have paid $125 for a sugar bowl lid and $600 for a small, rare blue cruet. A good way to become ...
Many items are place settings for dining, but there are also decorative bowls, candlesticks, kitchen accessories, vases and more. 2. WHO MADE IT? In the heyday of Depression glass production ...
Depression glass was inexpensive tableware of clear or ... so that you might find a dish and a bowl but nothing else,” Ronnie Broadbent said. That means collectors really have to hunt to ...
Depression glass, as it came to be known ... For items like serving bowls or pitchers, Pam said, “you could go to the five-and-dime and get bigger pieces that couldn’t fit in a box, for ...
munched on biscuits from emerald green cookie jars and ate desserts in amber brown bowls. Years later, their rainbow collection was fondly referred to as Depression glass by hobbyists. Nothing ...