When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: glass cylinder vases 5 inches

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Blenko Glass Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blenko_Glass_Company

    Blenko Glass survived, and even prospered, in part because of a new product: a figurine of West Virginia's mythical Flatwoods monster. The product was 16.5 inches tall, and was colored clover green and ruby red. Production was limited to about 800 pieces, and the figurine was popular among millennials—a new market segment. The product was ...

  3. List of glassware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_glassware

    A classic 20-facet Soviet table-glass, produced in the city of Gus-Khrustalny since 1943. Tumblers are flat-bottomed drinking glasses. Collins glass, for a tall mixed drink. [5] Dizzy cocktail glass, a glass with a wide, shallow bowl, comparable to a normal cocktail glass but without the stem; Faceted glass or granyonyi stakan

  4. Caneworking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caneworking

    It is commonly made by heating and shaping a chunk of clear, white, or colored glass on the end of a punty, and then gathering molten clear glass over the color by dipping the punty in a furnace containing the clear glass. After the desired amount of clear glass is surrounding the color, this cylinder of hot glass is then shaped, cooled and ...

  5. 19th Century glassmaking innovations in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/19th_Century_glassmaking...

    Flint glass melted in tank: In 1898 Charles H. Runyon of the Keystone Glass Company in Rochester, Pennsylvania, was the first in the United States to melt the batch for flint glass in a tank. [21] Note 11 ] A second source calls the Rochester company operating at that time (1897–1905) by the name of Keystone Tumbler Company.

  6. Get lifestyle news, with the latest style articles, fashion news, recipes, home features, videos and much more for your daily life from AOL.

  7. Float glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Float_glass

    Most window glass in the early 19th century was made using the cylinder method. The 'cylinders' were 6 to 8 feet (180 to 240 cm) long and 10 to 14 inches (25 to 36 cm) in diameter, limiting the width that panes of glass could be cut, and resulting in windows divided by transoms into rectangular panels.