Depression glass patterns range from simple to ornate, but whatever the pattern, their beauty sparkles just as brightly today as it did decades ago. This captivating colored glass is timeless in its ...
Cindy Faison went to her first Depression glass show in 1983, seeking colored cups to go with a crystal punchbowl. "I walked in the door and I saw all that glass, and I was bitten by the glass bug ...
Americans who lived through the Depression have vivid memories of long soup lines, great hardships and ”Brother, can you spare a dime?” Ironically, it cost only a dime to bring a bit of brightness ...
THE TERM, “DEPRESSION glass” is used to describe colored, transparent glassware made from the mid-1920s to the 1950s. There was a lot of clear glass and milk glass produced at the same time.
It is a paradox of the Great Depression: When life was at its most bleak, the plates and glasses people used were at their most cheerful. With demand for expensive glassware falling in the 1930s, ...
The revival of flea-market style items, French antiques and the "Shabby Chic" trend has brought Depression glassware back into the forefront of home table decorating. Colors like pink, yellow, crystal ...
Two of the most talked about types of glass in the field of antiques are stained glass and Depression glass. The typical styles of stained glass used in the 19th and early 20th centuries included ...
The first weekend in November marks the annual Michigan Depression Glass Society show and sale, considered one of the best shows of its type in the nation. Held at the Ford Community and Performing ...
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