Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Kralik "Iris" bottom-up spatter vase

In Art Glass > Show & Tell and Art Glass > Bohemian Art Glass > Show & Tell.
miike's loves39 of 175Loetz Papillon. probably the most elegant piece of my collection!Triang Silverstone Special
18
Love it
0
Like it

miikemiike loves this.
kralik1928kralik1928 loves this.
Michelleb007Michelleb007 loves this.
SEAN68SEAN68 loves this.
auraaura loves this.
IronLaceIronLace loves this.
Wow22Wow22 loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
LOUMANALLOUMANAL loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
IvonneIvonne loves this.
sklo42sklo42 loves this.
blunderbuss2blunderbuss2 loves this.
welzebubwelzebub loves this.
WatchsearcherWatchsearcher loves this.
larksellarksel loves this.
scottvezscottvez loves this.
truthordaretruthordare 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 6 years ago

    artfoot
    (367 items)

    The light iridescence on the surface of this vase gives it a vibrant presence but makes it challenging to get a good photo. It also makes me think this vase belongs in Kralik's "Iris" decor line. It stands just over 6" (15.4 cm) tall with a 4" (10.2 cm) diameter across the top. Underside is marked with the arched mark attributed to Wilhelm Kralik & Sons.

    The glass on this piece is much more complex than it might appear - a lot of work went into this vase. The gather was (I'm envisioning) first rolled in a red-orange-yellow spatter of glass crumbs, smoothed into the surface and blown enough to dip the bubble into a bowl of blue and violet crumbs, again smoothed and reheated, given a casing of clear glass, then blown into a mold. Whether the iridescence is done right then or is a re-striking of some sort, I don't know. But, speaking of re-striking, the interior of this vase appears to be apricot-color but that color only extends about ½" (1 cm) into the interior. I'm guessing this was also accomplished by a re-striking process. The initial gather (vase interior) is a white glass.

    logo
    Art Glass
    See all
    22
    22" Joel Philip Myers #6418 Very La...
    $152
    Vintage Scottish John Deacons Closepack Animal & Millefiori Glass Paperweight
    Vintage Scottish John Deacons Close...
    $64
    Scarce Vtg 25.5 Tall Blue White Cased Glass Empoli Genie Bottle with Stopper
    Scarce Vtg 25.5 Tall Blue White Cas...
    $103
    Vintage LE Smith Peacock Blue Swung Smoothie Fat Bottom Vase 21
    Vintage LE Smith Peacock Blue Swung...
    $65
    logo
    22
    22" Joel Philip Myers #6418 Very La...
    $152
    See all

    Comments

    1. kralik1928 kralik1928, 6 years ago
      Nice post -I believe this finish (acid or oxide) was a sprayed when the piece was hot, then re-fired. The pontil shouldn’t have the Iris finish. Finishes where the pontil has the same finish as the rest of the piece the finish was applied cold. The oxide or acid used to create the finish can change the surface of the base color from white to pearl, custard, rust or dark brown. I even have a piece or two where the spray was used without refining or in the cold process - in these they look matt-brown
    2. artfoot artfoot, 6 years ago
      Thanks Jericho. The pontil scar on this piece has been ground but not polished.
    3. artfoot artfoot, 6 years ago
      Thanks all for the loves.
    4. kralik1928 kralik1928, 6 years ago
      I can confirm the inside custard finish is the same luster finish of the outside, it was also sprayed on hot then the piece was furnace finished. I leaned this when a dealer looked at an iris and thought the inner finish looked like nail polish and polished off using some kind of scrubber. The interior is white under that custard color. There also some matching shapes and decors that I own with the interior being Iris (like yours) and the other being white. What I’m not sure is why some iris interiors are darker brown while others are very pale onionskin colored. It’s either the application was light or heavy or the piece sat in the furnace a little or a lot of time.

    Want to post a comment?

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