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bowl

Object Name4 Quart Pyrex Mixing Bowl
Pattern Name
  • Daisy
Designer Cynthia S. Gerow
Manufacturer Corning Glass Works, Charleroi
Made FromOpalware Glass, Enamel
Date1970-1972
TechniqueMold-pressed, screen-printed
SizeOverall H: 11.3cm, W: 32.9 cm, Diam: 26.4 cm
Accession Number2010.4.311 A
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
America's Favorite Dish: Celebrating a Century of Pyrex
Interpretive Notes
Pattern Description: “New Daisy PYREX Ware! A Corning Guide to adding a splash of sunshine to your cooking, serving and storing. You get a whole bouquet of Daisies…everything from oval casseroles, bowl sets, refrigerator and storage sets to coordinated pitchers and juicers….Go Daisy picking today.” This 1968 magazine ad for the new Daisy pattern illustrates a trend toward bright and happy colors. Released in 1968 in sunburst colors, the Daisy pattern only appears on the 442 and 444 Cinderella mixing bowls while the remaining bowls and casseroles were solid shades of yellow and orange. Daisy, instead, appears on the clear glass lids of the dishes until 1972 when the clear lids were replaced with opal lids, still with the Daisy design printed on top. While there were no Tabletop Accessories with the Daisy pattern it could be purchased on a wide array of products including the more standard casserole and bowl sets as well as on the three-piece Bakeware set (330-39) and the small 10 oz. or “pixie” casserole (700-39), both released in 1971. A set of juicers could be bought to accompany the Daisy design, but the juicers were printed with slices of oranges and lemons not Daisy, although still in the same vivid shades of yellow and orange. Daisy was discontinued in 1973.
Place Made
United States, PA, Charleroi
Physical Description4 Quart Mixing Bowl in "Daisy" Pattern. Opaque white opalware glass; screen-printed orange and yellow enamel; mold-pressed. 4 qt. circular orange colored bowl with handles, decorated in yellow daisy pattern with yellow flowers.
Provenance
Provenance information not currently available online. Please check back in the coming weeks.
plaque
25 BCE-99 CE
inlay
about 300-50 BCE
See individual records
fragment
1400-1085 BCE
fragment
99-1 BCE (possibly earlier)