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  2. Whitall Tatum Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitall_Tatum_Company

    Glass types included flint glass, blue and green glass, and artistic colored swirls, used for decoration and paperweights often made by the glass workers during their lunch hour. Whitall Tatum mass-produced special-order prescription bottles for hundreds of pharmacies, such as Smith & Hodgson in downtown Philadelphia, embossed with their names ...

  3. Paperweight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paperweight

    A glass paperweight commemorating the closure of the Princess Margaret Rose Orthopaedic Hospital (2002) A paperweight is a small solid object heavy enough, when placed on top of papers, to keep them from blowing away in a breeze or from moving under the strokes of a painting brush (as with Chinese calligraphy). While any object, such as a stone ...

  4. Baccarat (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baccarat_(company)

    This researcher had conducted studies into ways to color glass and now, promoted to assistant director, he developed the first multicolored paperweights made of crystal. [12] The range of manufactured products using watermarked glass engraved with a B was a great success in France and on the export market between 1846 and 1895. [12]

  5. Caithness Glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caithness_Glass

    The company headquarters and paperweight manufacturing were based in Perth from 1995, eventually resulting in the closure of the original Wick base and thus severing the physical connection with Caithness. [3] Caithness Glass went into receivership in 2004. It was bought by the owners of Edinburgh Crystal, but again went into receivership in 2006.

  6. Libbey Incorporated - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libbey_Incorporated

    Libbey Glass Works, Toledo, Ohio, 1912. The company's name was changed to The Libbey Glass Company in 1892, and it became part of Libbey-Owens-Ford for a number of years. . During this time the company was involved in the production of automotive glass in its partnership with Ford Motor Com

  7. Glass art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_art

    Apart from shaping the hot glass, the three main traditional decorative techniques used on formed pieces in recent centuries are enamelled glass, engraved glass and cut glass. The first two are very ancient, but the third an English invention, around 1730. From the late 19th century a number of other techniques have been added.

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