Depression and Elegant Glass

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  • Depression Glass
    • Index to Depression Glass Posts by Pattern
    • Identify Your Depression Glass Patterns with Photos – Pattern Identification Guide
    • Federal Depression Glass
      • Normandie
      • Patrician Spoke
      • Sharon Cabbage Rose
      • Other Federal Patterns
    • Hazel Atlas Depression Glass
      • Floral Poinsettia
      • Florentine #1 and #2 Poppy
      • Hazel Atlas Other Patterns
      • Royal Lace – Green, Pink, Blue and Clear
    • Hocking Depression Glass
      • Block Optic
      • Cameo Ballerina Depression Glass
      • Mayfair Depression Glass
      • Princess Depression Glass
      • Other Hocking Patterns
    • Jeannette Depression Glass
      • Cherry Blossom
      • Petal Swirl
      • Iris and Herringbone
      • Winsdor
      • Other Jeannette Patterns
    • Indiana Glass
    • Lancaster Glass
    • MacBeth Evans Depression Glass
      • American Sweetheart
      • Petalware Depression Glass White or Pink
    • US Glass
    • Other Depression Era Glass
    • Glass Colors – Pink, Green, Amber, Topaz, Blue and More
    • Vintage Tumblers & Swanky Swigs
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    • Cambridge Glass Pattern Photo Guide
    • Cambridge Diane
    • Cambridge Glass Rose Point
    • Other Cambridge Glass
  • Fostoria Glass
    • Fostoria Glass Patterns Photo Identification Guide
    • Fostoria Century
    • Fostoria Chintz
    • Fostoria Romance
    • Other Fostoria Glass
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    • Elegant Glass Photo Gallery Identification Guide
    • Central Glass
    • Duncan Miller
    • Heisey Glass
    • Imperial Glass
    • Monongah Glass
    • Morgantown Glass
    • New Martinsville Glass
    • Paden City
    • Tiffin Elegant Glass
    • Viking Glass
    • Westmoreland
    • Other Elegant Glass
  • Glass Pieces
    • Cake Plates and Serving Platters
    • Candy Dishes
    • Center Handled Serving Trays
    • Comports and Compotes
    • Console & Serving Bowls
    • Dinnerware and Luncheon Ware
    • Mayo Sets
    • Pitchers
    • Vintage Glass Candle Holders
    • Vintage Relish Trays
    • Vintage Stemware & Goblets
  • Glass Tips and Guides
    • Gift Buying Guide – Collectible Glass
    • Glass Book Reviews
    • How to Buy Glassware
    • How to Clean Glass
    • How to Enjoy Your Glass
    • How to Sell Glass
    • Let’s Reduce Confusion
    • Reproductions and Fakes
    • Tips to Identify Glass
      • Pattern Guides
        • Birds
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      • Why Collect Glass?
      • Tablescapes
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        • Elegant Glass Tables
        • China and Crystal
        • Pink Saturday
          • Pink Depression Glass
          • Pink Elegant Glass
          • Pink China and Other
  • 1940s and Later
    • Glass Patterns from the 1940s, 50s, 60s and 70s Identification Guide
  • Let’s Go Antiquing
    • Tablescapes
      • Depression Glass Tables
      • Elegant Glass Tables
      • China and Crystal
    • Pink Saturday
You are here: Home / Glass Tips and Guides / Glass Book Reviews / 7 Key Factors that Make Glass Books Useful

7 Key Factors that Make Glass Books Useful

February 28, 2011 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Fortune Pink Depression Glass Tumbler
Fortune Pink Depression Glass Tumbler

Last post we talked about how important good reference books are whether you are a casual collector or serious.  With a good book you know what you have.

Today let’s see what features to look for in glass books and sadly, what to be wary of in any book.

Best Features

  1. Good books will have clear photos that show the pattern and the shapes of individual pieces.  Is the pattern square?  Do all the pieces have scallops on the rim?  Good guides will show this.
  2. Really good books will show close up photos of the design.  There are so many etchings that are similar, it’s valuable to get an up close picture.
  3. You’ll have a write up that explains key points about the pattern.  For example, Hocking’s Fortune and Old Cafe depression glass patterns look alike in line drawings.  How can you tell them apart?  The better books will explain confusing patterns like this.  (Fortune is the pink glass pictured.)
  4. It’s helpful to have individual pieces explained.  What’s the difference between the cream soup and the sugar?  Or the butter dish and the cheese dish?  Gene Florence included legends to identify specific pieces in his later editions; that is helpful.
  5. It’s important to describe any reproductions and give directions to tell real from fake.  Some books show pictures of the fakes, but unless you have the real one to compare it to the photos are not much help.
  6. You need dimensions, ideally height and capacity for stemware, width for plates and bowls.  I recently bought a Rose Point wine described as the cordial – had I checked the height I’d have known what I was getting.  You’ll find a gazillion sherbets described as wine goblets or cordials, so check the heights, capacities and general shape.
  7. Lists of colors, pieces available, interesting information, production dates so on.  After all, we got the books because we have the glass and we have the glass because we like it!  We want to read about it.

Not So Good Features

  1. Sadly the price lists are rough guides at best.  I can  tell you from painful experience that some pieces are woefully under priced and others are so overpriced you wonder what the author was dreaming.  When I started selling glass I thought book prices were gospel. After I sold a few rare pieces of Duncan Sandwich for “book value” within seconds of listing them, I got the niggling suspicion that was silly.
  2. Not everything in a book is valuable, desirable or even particularly available.  It is an unfortunate truth that some patterns you just cannot give away and also true that some patterns are so hard to find that you could go years without seeing more than a couple pieces, even on line.  Do a bit of homework before you fall in love with a glass pattern.  (I have to take my own advice here!)
  3. Every once in a while authors say things that are just plain misleading or incomplete.  A good example is Hocking Princess.  Books mention that the reproduction candy jars have smooth feet.  The better books mention that Hocking made two styles, one with rayed foot and one with smooth foot, and that the only one that was reproduced has the smooth foot.

Next post in this series will review some of the better glass books out there for you.

Prior post on How to Select Elegant and Depression Glass Collector Guides

Related

Filed Under: Glass Book Reviews Tagged With: Buying Glass, Collecting Depression Glass, Depression Glass, Elegant Glass, Glass BOooks

Use Photos to Identify Your Glass

Depression Glass Photo Identification Guide

Depression Glass Index by Pattern

Fostoria Glass Photo Identification Guide

Cambridge Glass Photo Identification Guide

Everyday Glassware from 1940s to 1970s Photo Guide

Recommended Glass Reference Books

These are the books I use the most and recommend.  These are affiliate links which means I may receive a commission for purchases made through links.

Favorite Depression Glass Book 

Collector’s Encyclopedia of Depression Glass by Gene and Cathy Florence, 2007 edition 

Collector’s Encyclopedia of Depression Glass by Gene and Cathy Florence, 2010 edition

Favorite Elegant Glass Books

Elegant Glass: Early, Depression, & Beyond, Revised & Expanded 4th Edition Hardcover – July 28, 2013 by Debbie and Randy Coe

Collector’s Encyclopedia of Depression Glass, 19th Edition Hardcover – Illustrated, July 10, 2009 by Gene and Cathy Florence

Best for 1940s-1970s

Collectible Glassware From the 40s, 50s, 60s: An Illustrated Value Guide, 10th Edition – Illustrated, July 14, 2009 by Gene and Cathy Florence

Favorite Fostoria Books

Best Overall:  Fostoria: Its First Fifty Years Hardcover – January 1, 1972 by Hazel Marie Weatherman 

Best for Stemware:  Fostoria Stemware: The Crystal for America – January 1, 1994
by Milbra Long and Emily Seate

Best for Fostoria Tableware pre 1943:  Fostoria Tableware: 1924-1943 – January 1, 1999 by Milbra Long and Emily Seate

Best for Fostoria Tableware After 1943:  Fostoria Tableware: 1924-1943 – January 1, 1999 by Milbra Long and Emile Seate

 

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This site shares my love for American vintage glass from the late 1920s on.   It is a blog with lots of pictures (eye candy!), information and opinions.

I do not buy nor sell glass, this is strictly an Enjoy! site.

Users agree that anything posted here is said to the best of my knowledge but I am not responsible for any loss you may experience from using the content.

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