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You are here: Home / Glass Tips and Guides / Tips to Identify Glass / Detective Work – Viking Glass Georgian Ruby Red Honeycomb Iced Tea

Detective Work – Viking Glass Georgian Ruby Red Honeycomb Iced Tea

August 19, 2010 by Kathy 7 Comments

Viking Glass Georgian Ruby Red Iced Tea Goblet
Viking Glass Georgian Ruby Red Iced Tea Goblet

Do you enjoy detective stories?  This isn’t a whodunit with dead bodies or great bank heists, but a safe quiet hunt to identify exactly what this goblet is.

My grandma had a set of red tumblers that had honeycombs on the side that I always liked.  Years later I found that honeycomb pattern is Georgian.

Many companies produced a Georgian pattern, including Fenton, Cambridge, Paden City, Hocking and Viking.  Some of the pieces are different enough you can tell them apart but others require detective work.  The book Great American Glass of the Roaring 20s and Depression Era Book 2 by Measell and Wiggins has an insert that gives good clues for you.

Luckily for me this goblet is easy.  See the bulge in the stem and the spots on the foot?  That bulge has the honeycomb facets and the foot has raised honeycombs on the underside.  Easy peasey.  Viking Glass made this shape.

The next step is which goblet?  Viking made a lot of pieces, from low footed sherbets to tall iced tea tumblers, goblets, cocktails and juices.  It’s hard to tell by eyeballing a goblet, you should measure the height and the capacity.  Always fill the goblet right to the rim so it just shy of spilling and give the capacity in ounces.  (A helpful tip is that an ounce is two tablespoons and there are eight ounces to a cup.)  Armed with dimensions you can look in books or in a reliable website.  My favorite book is Elegant Glass: Early, Depression, & Beyond by Debbie and Randy Coe which gives accurate dimensions and great photos. For patterns not in Coe & Coe, try using Replacements.com.

This particular goblet is 6 1/8 inches tall and holds between 12 and 13 ounces.  It’s too big for the water and much too big for the wine goblet.  It is the iced tea.

Mystery solved!

If you have a detective story to share please leave a comment.  It would be fun to hear from you and if you like, you could contribute to a blog post with your detective work.

Full disclosure:  All Amazon links are affiliate links that pay me a commission.

Related

Filed Under: Tips to Identify Glass Tagged With: Viking Glass, 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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