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Depression glass comes in a wide array of colors and patterns, and with this handy guide, you can easily identify genuine pieces and estimate their value.
Fire-King’s Turquoise Depression Glass was primarily made between the 1940s and 1960s, offering everything from serving dishes and dinner plates to mixing bowls and cups. 4. Hazel Atlas Blue ...
You really can't beat the vibrant beauty of Depression glass, so it's no wonder it's such a hit with collectors and anyone ...
Depression glass, as it came to be known, ... “With a new Frigidaire, you would get a full set—the plate, a cup and saucer, a sugar and creamer, and a serving sandwich tray.” ...
For Ronnie and Gloria Broadbent, collecting Depression glass is more than finding treasure. With each richly colored dinner plate, vase or candlestick, the Broadbents are preserving a piece of ...
Examples include tea cups, salt shakers, cake plates and an array of other items. Depression glass is immediately recognizable for its striking colors, often in green, blue, pink and yellow.
In the 1920s and 1930s, Indiana Glass was known for dozens of unique glass patterns in molded Depression glass plates, crystal goblets and servers. The company also made canisters, ...
Millie Downey can tell a story about every one of the 10,000 pieces of Depression glass in her shop just north of Orlando. Millie Downey, 88, tells the history of a soda glass that’s part of her ...
A disaster forced the National Depression Glass Museum to close and — through much precise and laborious work — eventually move in the south-central Kansas town of Wellington.