Depression and Elegant Glass

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You are here: Home / Glass Tips and Guides / Gift Buying Guide - Collectible Glass / Retro Glassware from the 1950s and 60s – Petal from Federal Glass

Retro Glassware from the 1950s and 60s – Petal from Federal Glass

March 15, 2010 by Kathy 2 Comments

Petal Crystal Bowl Handled Tidbit Federal Glass

Petal Crystal Bowl Handled Tidbit Federal Glass

This week I’m visiting our daughter and her family and that prompted this post.  Our daughter collects Petal from Federal Glass and has an amazing collection of colors and shapes.  She started this fun hobby about 10 years ago when we went to a flea market and she found an iridescent plate she loved.  Since then she’s bought glass on eBay and on antiquing trips with me.

Federal made Petal in the 1950s and 60s and possibly even later into the early 1970s.  There are 6 or 7 basic shapes, three sizes of plates, four sizes of bowls and a candle holder like a hurricane lamp.  Don’t let these few pieces make you think this is a small pattern.  Federal Glass and other after market companies combined the bowls into tidbits like the center handled server shown, two- and three-layered tidbits, a jelly server, angel pedestal compote and so on.

Clear (or crystal) Petal is the most common.  Besides clear you can find a soft green, dark green, Sun Gold which is yellow, amber, blue, iridescent, iridescent brown, purple and red.  Some of these are flashed colors and some are colored glass.  I believe the reds and purple are all flashed while the brown, yellow, amber and light green are colored glass.  Our daughter has almost every piece in every color.

What makes me happiest about seeing her collection is that she rotates pieces out on display.  She can’t put everything out so she has 5 or 6 pieces scattered through the house and she puts different ones out at different times.  Right now she has bananas and tangerines in a Sun Gold medium sized bowl and a center handled red tidbit on the hallway table.  I always like to see people enjoy their glass and use it.  This glass was made to use and enjoy – so use it, enjoy it and share your enjoyment with your friends.

If you like this pattern please see our selection in Cat Lady Kate’s Elegant and Depression Glass online store.  It’s like antiquing with your best friend.

Related

Filed Under: Gift Buying Guide - Collectible Glass Tagged With: Collecting Depression Glass, Federal Glass

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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