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Adam is a highly coveted and enduringly popular Depression glass pattern from the prolific Jeannette Glass Company. It was produced in small quantities between 1932 and 1934, making it rare and ...
Many Depression glass patterns have geometric designs or floral motifs, but one super rare one stands out from the crowd. The Federal Glass Company made Parrot from 1931 to 1932, and it's one of ...
Hazel Atlas Blue Royal Lace stands out among Depression glass patterns, prized for its intricate design and vibrant cobalt blue hue. Produced between 1934 and 1941, this elegant pattern features a ...
Three terms are easily confused: pressed glass, Carnival glass and Depression glass. Pressed, shorthand for impressed by stamping, refers to a method of stamping a pattern in hot glass.
According to the National Depression Glass Association, the more renowned and prolific manufacturers were Federal, Hazel-Atlas, Hocking, Indiana, Jeanette, MacBeth-Evans, and U.S. Glass.
In the heyday of Depression glass production, there were about 20 U.S. manufacturers making hundreds of patterns. Many were located in the Midwest, especially in the Ohio River valley.
Hazel Atlas Glass Co. made Royal Lace, one of the most popular depression glass patterns, from 1934 to 1941 in pink, green, crystal and cobalt blue.  ...
“Rarely does the glass have a name or mark,” says John Fiore, president of the South Florida Depression Glass Club. “You have to learn to know the pattern, color, shape and design to get a ...
Collectors of glass made in the 1930s, the Depression era, can find examples of the popular patterns made by Indiana Glass, such as Avocado (a huge financial success for the company), a pear-like ...