Depression and Elegant Glass

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      • Petalware Depression Glass White or Pink
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You are here: Home / Glass Tips and Guides / Glass Book Reviews / Stemware Identification – Cordials on Parade – Gene Florence Book Review

Stemware Identification – Cordials on Parade – Gene Florence Book Review

December 10, 2012 by Kathy Leave a Comment

This book, Stemware Identification, Featuring–Cordials with Values, 1920s-1960s, by Gene Florence, shows page after page of small stems to help us identify our glass.  Gene Florence collected cordials and used his collection as the basis for this identification guide.

This cordial identification guide is laid out a little differently than most glass books.  Florence sorts his stems by color, then by company name and pattern within the color.  He explains in the “How to Use This Book” section that he felt most of us wouldn’t need a book if we knew the maker, but we can all pick out the color.

Regardless, the result is visually stunning with nine cordials per page and 151 pages!  It’s fun to see the colors and variations.

The photos are excellent and very helpful to identify the stem line, that is the basic shape of the stem.  The photos of etched or cut patterns vary.  Some etch photos are clear enough that you can spot the pattern while others are harder to see the detail.

But what you can do – and I’ve done this more than a few times – is use the overall placement of the etch on the stem to get a sense of what your stem might be.  For example, Fostoria Mystic has lots of pattern near the base and a flower that reaches up into the clear part of the bowl.  Even if you cannot make out the details of that flower you get a very good idea what the pattern will look like from a distance.  Use this sense of pattern shape when you’re at a sale or when browsing an estate sale advertisement online.  It’s amazing how quickly your sense of shape will see a shape in the etched patterns too.

Florence gives a price but as he notes, price guides are notoriously inaccurate.  Pricing varies so much, over time, even regionally. However, normally glass prices retain some overall relative sense, so a pricey pattern today is  likely to be pricey tomorrow, even if the overall market goes up or down.

In the back Florence includes comparisons of full stem lines, for example, every stem in the Fostoria Vesper amber glass.  He does this for a pattern from Tiffin and Fostoria and two Cambridge patterns, including side-by-side photos and piece heights.  Seeing the shapes is helpful.

This is one of the first stemware identification guides I bought and I still use it.  There are a couple downsides:

  • It shows only cordials, not goblets or sherbets.  Normally a cordial looks like the goblet but smaller, so this isn’t so bad.
  • It doesn’t give dimensions.  That means you need to look elsewhere if you want to be sure you have the parfait and not the iced tea.
  • I tend to use other books for etched pieces.

Overall I recommend this book, Stemware Identification, Featuring–Cordials with Values, 1920s-1960s, and suggest it for glass lovers who enjoy buying pieces from many patterns, or those, like me, who seek unusual stemware.

Related

Filed Under: Glass Book Reviews Tagged With: Buying Glass, Glass Books, Vintage Stemware

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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