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vase

Object NameVase with Gazelle
Manufacturer Pairpoint Manufacturing Co.
Manufacturer Rockwell Silver Company
Made FromNon-lead glass, Silver
Date1925-1938
Place MadeUnited States, MA, New Bedford; United States, CT, Meriden
TechniqueBlown, silver decorated electrolytically
SizeOverall H: 32.7 cm, Diam (max): 17 cm
Accession Number84.4.190
Credit LineGift of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford G. Maynard
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
Mt. Washington and Pairpoint: American Glass from the Gilded Age to the Roaring Twenties
Not On View
Interpretive Notes
Silver-overlay wares combined the arts of silversmithing and glassmaking. The process of depositing sterling silver on glass utilized electroplating, and the wares were sometimes marketed as “deposit ware.” It is unknown whether Pairpoint applied the silver in its own plant or sent the glass out to other decorating shops. The company also supplied undecorated glass to the Rockwell Silver Company of Meriden, Connecticut, which added the silver overlay to the glass, often with incised ornament on the surface. Although this expensive type of decoration sold well at first, the Great Depression limited sales in the 1930s.
Physical DescriptionBlack and colorless non-lead glasses; blown, silver decorated electrolytically. Trumpet-shaped vase of black glass, silver decorated with a design of two deer in an oval surrounded by dogwood foliage; applied stem section of black glass; applied colorless bubble ball knop; applied stem section of black glass, applied circular foot with polished pontil mark underneath.
Provenance
Source Mrs. Clifford G. Maynard - 1984-10-16
Source Clifford G. Maynard - 1984-10-16
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