Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Fairy Lamp - Oak leaf with acorns

In Art Glass > Bohemian Art Glass > Show & Tell and Lamps > Show & Tell.
Art Glass14320 of 23434Glass Art Bowl by Steve NechodomMurano Crystal Clear"WOW"
18
Love it
0
Like it

martikamartika loves this.
scottvezscottvez loves this.
IronLaceIronLace loves this.
MoonhillMoonhill loves this.
courtenayantiquescourtenayantiques loves this.
PerfumerPerfumer loves this.
JustanoviceJustanovice loves this.
ozmartyozmarty loves this.
inkyinky loves this.
Michelleb007Michelleb007 loves this.
antiqueroseantiquerose loves this.
kivatinitzkivatinitz loves this.
surfdub66surfdub66 loves this.
sklo42sklo42 loves this.
IvonneIvonne loves this.
aghcollectaghcollect loves this.
welzebubwelzebub loves this.
Moonstonelover21Moonstonelover21 loves this.
See 16 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 10 years ago

    IMASapp
    (57 items)

    This fairy lamp is from our undocumented collection. It is unusual in many respects, not least of which is the Oak with Acorn decoration. This decoration has many attributions, all without supporting documentation. I think I can discount the British attributions and focus on Bohemian glass houses. But, which one?

    This lamp is cased in white with an embossed diamond design. The piecrust base plate is attached to the lamp cup. The Oak and Acorn decoration is clear frosted glass. The leaves appear to be hand formed but the acorns appear to be pressed or at least mold formed.

    The following link will take you to an article written in 2007 soliciting information. It includes some background on the lamp and several examples of similar decoration on various shapes and in several colors. Since this article was written, additional shapes have been documented.

    http://www.fairy-lamp.com/Fairylamp/Temp/Fairy_Lamp_Acorn_Decoration.pdf

    Opinions and theories are appreciated. But, supporting documentation is priceless. :-)

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Bohemian Art Glass
    See all
    vintage Czech Bohemian malachite glass box
    vintage Czech Bohemian malachite gl...
    $16
    Bohemian Style Champagne Flute Glasses Hand Cut To Clear Crystal Glass 5oz Blue
    Bohemian Style Champagne Flute Glas...
    $62
    Vaseline Antique Victorian Bohemian Filigree Gold Enameled Uranium Glass Vase
    Vaseline Antique Victorian Bohemian...
    $125
    Rare Antique Bohemian Czech Hand Painted Floral Uranium Vaseline Glass Vase 6
    Rare Antique Bohemian Czech Hand Pa...
    $45
    logo
    vintage Czech Bohemian malachite glass box
    vintage Czech Bohemian malachite gl...
    $16
    See all

    Comments

    1. IanBrighton IanBrighton, 10 years ago
      I am loving your fairy lamp posts as, in common with many I am sure, I didn't know about them before.
      Original documentation is difficult for lots of Czech glass as you are finding. I am sure there is more out there but we are a little limited with, for example, only a few pages for Kralik and a pressed glass catalogue for Rindskopf.
      The secondary sources are learned and academic. But even they are subject to change and review.
      Ian
    2. IanBrighton IanBrighton, 10 years ago
      I think all that can be said with confidence at the moment is that the acorn detailing is mighty similar to that on Scott's link to a recent post!
    3. IMASapp IMASapp, 10 years ago
      Thank you Ian, it was Scott's post that prompted me to include this example.

      These decorations began showing up several years ago. For some time I thought they were modern reproductions. It was not until the fairy lamp showed up that I changed my mind. To me, the fairy lamp is Bohemian and not British. Some, however, may disagree.

      Fairy lamps are indeed a niche collectable. I am drawn to them because of the infinite variety of glass and designs. After over 40 years of collecting, I never grow tired of them or the areas of research they lend themselves to. I post them on this forum to tap into areas of expertise I do not have. British attributions are pretty easy because of the documentation. Bohemian attritnutions are a bit more problematic.
    4. IronLace IronLace, 8 years ago
      Whoever made this also made vases with the same decoration - I have two, one in this same blue, the other in a butterscotch type colour. The combination of a satin finish with a raised quilted texture (rather like cut velvet satin glass) is quite distinctive.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.