Vases
Vintage Milk Bottle with Carrier
OWI
milk bottles, carrier, basket, kitchen
vintage
Price:
$23.99
$23.99
Customer Reviews:
-
Very cool
This is a very cool product. They did a very good job of wrapping it up so that it didn't receive any damage on the way out. They are a lot smaller than I thought they were going to be though. -
EXCELLENT Reproduction
I expected cheap stuff, but this bottle set looks like I found it at a old Southern farm. I mean this looks legit. Even the metal is prefectly aged. Looks awesome in my kitchen. Seller shipped pronto.
Answers
There is a symbol on the bottom that looks almost oriental, but more like an "H"
Also, they seem to be an old milk glass, almost see through. Has a fruit design on them, grapes and vines?
You can check ebay for similar items, or take a cup and saucer to an antique shop that deals with glass and ask them for information. It sounds like it might be a depression era glass. Look also for seams on the glass. That suggests that it was molded glass.
The value of an antique vase can range from a couple of dollars to thousands of dollars, depending on the material, the style, the period and how ...
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it is over 30 yrs old floral pattern and has maybe a silver lining or maybe copper.no noticeable signature
Gee, are you the guy I saw at the curb 5 years ago? You don't even give the size or what part of the world your found it. Take good big pictures, post on Flickr, post the link here, and you will have the slightest chance of getting it identified.
Potter's work features heritage
In the August issue, Gobble and his demijohn jug designed exclusively for Our State are featured in the publication store. The demijohn jug, based on antique jugs made for storing alcohol, is signed by Gobble, stamped with the Our State North Carolina logo at the bottom and features an intricate dogwood "sprig" that has been applied to the jug and a tri-color glaze of brown, white and blue. Gobble noted the blue band around the middle is from where the white and brown glazes overlap and the cobalt turns blue. The jug will be sold through the magazine's store through the end of the year and will be in the holiday catalog.
The distinctive piece is an homage not only to the state's long-standing pottery industry but also the state's once thriving moonshine industry, which spawned NASCAR. The same issue features a story called "History in a Mason Jar," which chronicles the history of moonshine and the drivers who hauled the then-illegal liquor, such as legendary NASCAR driver Junior Johnson, who is now a partner in the state's first legal moonshine maker, Piedmont Distillers in Madison, which began production in 2005.



