Main Menu

Tumbler

Skip to main content
Collections Menu

Tumbler

Place of Originprobably Europe; possibly New Bremen, Maryland, United States
Date1770-1800
Dimensions3 11/16 × 3 1/8 × 1 13/16 in. (9.4 × 8 × 4.6 cm)
Mediumnon-lead glass
ClassificationGlass
Credit LineGift of Edward Drummond Libbey
Object number
1917.279
Not on View
DescriptionPatterned with twenty-four pointed-arch flutes extending 1.8 cm (11/16 in.) above the base, seven rows of twenty-four elongated diamonds in the middle, and a plain area above. Blown in a mold, possibly a one-piece dip mold. Plain, slightly concave base. Traces of a partly rough pontil mark surrounded by rough-ground, unpolished area. Engraved with stone wheels with a band of stylized foliate motifs between a "squiggle" band at the rim and the top of the molded pattern.
Published ReferencesWilson, Kenneth M., American Glass, 1760-1930: The Toledo Museum of Art, New York: Hudson Hills Press in association with the Toledo Museum of Art, [Lanham, Md.]: National Book Network [distributor], c1994; 2 v. (879 p.): ill. (some col.); 32 cm., 1994, p. 783, no. 1325.
Tumbler
New Bremen Glass Manufactory of John Frederick Amelung
1785-1800
Tumbler
New Bremen Glass Manufactory of John Frederick Amelung
late 18th to early 19th century
New Bremen Glass Manufactory of John Frederick Amelung
1785-1795
Pocket Bottle
New Bremen Glass Manufactory of John Frederick Amelung
1785-1795
Goblet
New Bremen Glass Manufactory of John Frederick Amelung
1792
Jar or Vase
Late nineteenth to early twentieth century
Libbey Glass Company, a subsidiary of Owens-Illinois Glass Company
1931-1935
Footed Tumbler
Probably 1920s
Goblet
Probably 1895-1910

Membership

Become a TMA member today

Support TMA

Help support the TMA mission