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Robert William Willson (Mertzon, Texas, May 28, 1912 – San Antonio, June 1, 2000) was an American artist and sculptor notable for his creative use of solid glass. He was one of the first Americans to work with solid glass in partnership with the glass blowers of Murano, Italy.
Irving Amen (1918-2011), stained glass; Gary Beecham (b. 1955) Howard Ben Tré (1949-2020) Martin Blank (b. 1962) Granite Calimpong (b. 1982) Jean-Pierre Canlis (b. 1973) Frederick Carder (1863-1963) Ed Carpenter (b. 1946) Dale Chihuly (b. 1941) Deborah Czeresko (b. 1961) Dan Dailey (b. 1947) Fritz Dreisbach (b. 1941) Robert C. Fritz (1920-1986 ...
$1130.30 at 1stdibs.com. Tiffany Studios. In the U.S., Tiffany Studios, founded in the U.S. by the son of the founder of Tiffany & Company, Louis Comfort Tiffany, produced a type of glass called ...
Ransgil Glass Co. Oakland: 1940s-50s: Gold-encrusted china and glassware: Red Doat: Berkeley: 1930s: Figurines [11] Redlands Pottery: Redlands: 1902–1909: Art ware [10] Richenda Stevick: Redwood City, then Berkeley: 1930s: Figurines & art ware [11] Roblin Art Pottery: San Francisco: 1898–1906: Art pottery [12] San Carlos Pottery: San Carlos ...
The glass used was crystal and seven colors of glass: amber, blue, green, pink, amethyst, brown, and ruby. Among Jamestown stemware, ruby is valued higher than other colors by collectors. [80] Among the milk glass patterns, Vintage was used for tableware and a few types of stemware from 1958 to 1965. [81]
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.
Suzanne Plunkett - WPA Pool/Getty. Kate Middleton and Prince William arrive to visit SprotsAid at Bisham Abbey National Sports Centre on World Mental Health Day on Oct. 12, 2023 in Marlowe, England
Robert & William Wilson were American silversmiths in Philadelphia, active in partnership from roughly 1825–1846, then continuing as a mark until 1877. It was succeeded by William Wilson & Son. Robert and William Wilson were brothers. Robert, the elder, started making silver at 25 Dey Street, New York City, in 1803. By 1812 he apparently ...