Exhibition in Austria – New York Milk Bottle Needed

Washing milk bottles, Briarcliff Farms, near New York, N.Y. U.S.A

Attention New York Milk Bottle Collectors!

Hello,

I am a consultant for a forthcoming exhibition in Austria on the history of biology, based on a book I wrote a few years ago (A Guinea Pig’s History of Biology, Harvard University Press, 2007). Like the book, the exhibition is based around the various plants and animals that helped scientists understand how inheritance and genetics work.

Among the important organisms to be included in the exhibition are fruit flies (Drosophila); when these were first brought into the lab in the early C20, they were kept in half-pint milk bottles, which is why I am contacting you. Around about 1905, Professor Thomas Hunt Morgan and his students at Columbia University helped themselves to empty milk bottles from New Yorkers doorsteps. We would like to include a typical US milk bottle from this period in the exhibition and I was wondering if any of your members might have one? Arrangements for shipping, insurance, etc would all be made by the staff of the Oberösterreichische Landesmuseen in Linz, Austria, but if you would be willing to circulate this request to your membership, please ask them to contact me in the first instance.

Many thanks, Jim

Dr Jim Endersby
Senior Lecturer, Department of History, University of Sussex
* Mail: Arts Building A, Arts Road, University of Sussex, Brighton, BN1 9RH

J.J.Endersby@sussex.ac.uk

http://www.sussex.ac.uk/profiles/198879

http://www.sussex.ac.uk/profiles/198879

Posted in History, Milk & Creamers, Museums | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The Coca-Cola Bottle Collectors Club

I received this email yesterday that I thought was interesting. I know there were a number of tables near me at the Houston Show full of Coke items. These guys are big and serious. I need to pay more attention to the oh so rare, Biedenharn Candy Co., Vicksburg, Mississippi bottles (see above) that show up every so often. Also need to visit the World of Coke Museum in Atlanta. Check them out. Especially the Virtual Museum which, as you may know, is my next big project for the hobby.

Hi Mr. Meyer,

I am Sharon Shanholtzer, Membership Director of The Coca-Cola Collectors Club. I am writing you in hopes you could give me some information in regards to your web site. The Coca-Cola Collectors Club is currently in the process of changing platforms and redesigning their web site. I am the chairperson of this project. I have been looking at other Collector Club’s sites, or which your Club’s is one.

I am very impressed with the layout and design of your site [editor note: FOHBC site].  I was trying to locate the design firm, or software system it was done by. The only thing I found was WordPress.org. This is a free program, correct? Did your Club do the current site with this program?

If you could fill me in on the details of your Club’s site, it would be greatly appreciated. We currently are looking at all possibilities for the redesign of our site.

Thank you for your time.  If you would like to view are current site, it is at: www.cocacolaclub.org

Best Regards,

Sharon Shanholtzer
Membership Director
The Coca-Cola Collectors Club
Sharon@omegacps.com
sashanholtzer@juno.com

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Summertime is for Corn – Great Corn Figurals

Corn Field Art

Silver Queen Corn

Summertime is for Corn – Great Corn Figurals

14 August 2011

Apple-Touch-IconAI grew up in Maryland and remember all of the corn fields I would see on my way to the Maryland and Delaware beaches in the summer. We would always stop at the fruit and vegetable stands and buy Silver Queen Corn. Makes my mouth water. Everything is fried and baked dry in this terrible drought in Texas so I thought I would play with and post my corn bottles!

National Bitters – Meyer Collection

Figural Whiskey Corns – Meyer Collection

Figural Corn Cologne – Meyer Collection

Fitzpatrick Whiskey Corn – Ex Meyer – Forbes Collection

Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Cologne, Color Runs, Figural Bottles, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Cathedral Pickles & Pepper Sauce Bottles

Cathedral Pickles - Errera 1

Hi Ferd…

I love your site, and I’ve watched it grow since I found out about it through Jeff Wichmann [editor note: American Bottle Auctions]. You’ve done a wonderful job with it, as it’s very informative with what collectors are finding and collecting. I hope it will be here for many, many years… Good Job.

You probably don’t me, as I always kept a low profile… I use to collect rare pontiled or colored Sarsaparillas that I have sold years ago, and my late wife Kathie collected Cathedral Pickles for the last 40 years… I still have her collection, which consists of nearly 100 examples, just can’t part with them knowing how much she loved each and every one of them…

Her life long desire was to publish a book on just cathedral pickles and cathedral pepper sauce bottles, but sadly she never got around to it, and in later years when illness ravaged her body she lost interest, but she would always pick up one of her bottles and enjoy studying the mold form as she would handle each and every one over time…

Since her passing, I’ve tried to pick up where she left off with her dream of a cathedral book, but i haven’t had much success. She knew quite a bit about them, where many were blown, the years of manufacture, and which food packers used which styles. Sadly all the information she learned over the years was kept in her head, and i never really absorbed any information she shared with me.

I have contacted some collectors requesting information, but received very little. I’ve put out fliers at shows telling of my intentions and even handing copies to dealers, but never heard from anyone. I just don’t have the knowledge to do this on my own and i would love to do this in memory of my wife…

I was hoping, maybe, you would put a copy of my request on your site? A few years ago i ran an ad in Jim’s magazine, but there again I didn’t receive more than one reply. I’m sure there must be collectors out there who would like to share some knowledge for this long needed reference book, but the right haven’t seen it yet…

Ferd, if you can do this, I am truly grateful, But if there is a problem with my request, Then know, that I fully understand…

Respectfully

Bill Errera

Bill sent Peachridge Glass an earlier email with pictures of some of the subject bottles (click here). Bill’s email address is iluvtriess92@msn.com. Great material for the Virtual Museum. Hopefully this book can happen.

Errera Letter

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Some Really Nice Cathedral Pickle PIcs from Bill Errera

Received some rather nice pictures from Bill Errera. Good photography and an eye for composition is very evident here. The bottles really get respect in each shot. Thanks Bill! I also added my favorite to the Cathedral Pickle Page (click here)

Mornin Ferd…

I noticed you asked for other photos of cathedral pickle bottles.. Here are some that is in my late wife’s collection. She really never looked for fantastic colors, she was more into finding rare and different mold designs regardless of color. Then if she found a better colored one, she would buy it and replace the one she had…

Bill Errera

Cathedral Pickles - Errera 1Cathedral Pickles - Errera 2Cathedral Pickles - Errera 3Cathedral Pickles - Errera 4Cathedral Pickles - Errera 5Cathedral Pickles - Errera 6

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Professor Byrne and Landsberg – Some Highly Decorative Bottles

Professor Byrne and Landsberg

Some Highly Decorative Bottles

13 August 2011 (R•051814) (R•031616) (R•081918) (R•121518)

Apple-Touch-IconANorman C. Heckler Company (see below) has a nice Professor Byrnes in their Auction 93. It is lot #20. It got me thinking about my example and upon closer look, appears to be about the same color. Oh well. Why couldn’t it be green….you reading Mark? Anyway, I thought I would post a few pictures of my Byrnes and Landsbergs today. Simply great bottles.

Professor Byrne’s Universal Stomach Bitters

L-R Landsberg’s Pure Blackberry Brandy, Professor Byrne Great Universal Compound Stomach Bitters, Landsberg’s Century Bitters and M.G. Landsberg Chicago – Meyer Collection

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

B 280  Professor Byrne Stomach Bitters
PROFESSOR / GEO. J. BYRNE / NEW YORK // f // THE / GREAT / UNIVERSAL / COMPOUND / STOMACH / BITTERS / PATENTED / 1870 // f // // s // DC // CC // LX // XM // u // motif // motif // motif // U.S.A. //
10 1/4 x 2 7/8 (6 1/2) Square, LTCR, Amber, Applied mouth, Very Scarce;
Clear and Yellow olive – Extremely rare.

George J. Byrne Select Listings

George J. Byrne was born in Ireland on 10 July 1824. He came to America in 1849 and settled in New York City. He must have joined up with his father because we see a Landsberg & Weber listing as Perfumers in New York City in 1834. George J. became a perfume manufacturer, patent medicine man and a bitters maker and patented his gorgeous trade mark bottle in 1870. Byrne died in 1900 and his son John G. Byrne continued the business.

1834: Landsberg & Weber, Perfumers, 5 Benson – Longworth’s American Almanack, New-York Register, and City Directory: 1834-1835
1873: George J. Byrne, Perfumer, 122 Liberty and 125 Cedar, Home N.J. – Goulding’s New York City Directory for 1875-76
1875: George J. Byrne, Bitters, 122 Liberty and 125 Cedar – Goulding’s New York City Directory for 1875-76
1875: George J. Byrne, Patent Medicines, 122 Liberty – New York City Directory for 1875
1878-80: George J. Byrne, Bitters, 122 Liberty – New York City Directory
1900: Death of George J. Byrne – The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Friday, March 2, 1900

Professor Byrne The Great Universal Compound Stomach Bitters in orange amber – Meyer Collection

B280 Byrneyellow_RH

Professor Byrne The Great Universal Compound Stomach Bitters in yellow – Bitters Bottles Supplement

004-1

“The / Great / Universal / Compound / Stomach / Bitters / Patented / 1870” – “Professor / Geo. J. Byrne / New York” Figural Bitters Bottle, America, 1870-1880. Square modified cabin form with roped corners and fancy overall embossing, colorless with a strong lavender tint, tooled sloping collared mouth with ring – smooth base with impressed five pointed star, ht. 10 1/2 inches. R/H #B-280 Retains metal closure and porcelain stopper which reads “Amanda Miller / Germantown, PA.”. Extremely rare. Strong mold impression. Unlisted color. Fine condition. Property of The Strong, sold to benefit the museum’s collections fund. – Heckler Premier Auction 133


Landsberg’s Century Bitters 

L 13  Landsberg’s Century Bitters 
LANDSBERG’S / “CENTURY” / BITTERS // sp // THE / ADLER COMPANY / ST LOUIS // sp // // u // motif eagle // 1876 // motif shield // motif sunburst with 1776 //
11 1/2 x 2 7/8 (6 1/4) Square, Amber, LTCR, Applied mouth, 4 sp, Rare
12 stars on bell shaped shoulder. An especially ornate bottle.
Note: Design No. 12,861 patented April 11, 1882 by Moses Landsberg of Chicago, Illinois. “The object of my present invention is to furnish a novel design for a bottle; and it consists of making the body of the bottle with four rectangular sides (panels), having arched tops, two of the alternate faces or facets being left smooth; or all four of the sides may be left plain; and in the arch spaces over the rectangular faces are represented respectively a shield, the figures 1876, a spread eagle, and a rayed sun. The edges of the sides of the bottle are corrugated in lozenges, while the base is surrounded by a series of hexagons. The neck of the bottle represents the handle, and the shoulder of the body of a bell, the bell being encircled midway by a ring of stars”.

Read More: Adler’s Celebrated Anti-Cholera Bitters

L 15  Landsberg’s Century Bitters 
LANDSBERG’S / “CENTURY” / BITTERS // sp // A. HELLER & BRO. / NEW YORK. // // u // motif eagle // 1876 // motif shield // motif shield // motif sunburst with 1776 //  // b // PAT (blurred as if done twice)
10 7/8 x 2 7/8 (6 1/4) Square, Amber, LTCR, 4 sp, Very rare

Landsberg’s Century Bitters – Meyer Collection


M. G. Landsberg, Chicago

M. G. LANDSBERG / CHICAGO // sp // sp // sp // 11 x 2 3/4 (6 1/2), Square, Amber, LTCR, 4 sp,
One side shows where the lettering has been peened out leaving the side plain.
Note: This bottle shows much finer detail than Landsberg Century Bitters. The eagle is larger and a different shape, figures of ‘1876’ are a different shape, and a halberd on shoulder faces right. There are thirteen stars on the bell (larger and perfectly formed). Thought to be a labeled Bitters though none have been seen.

M. G. Landsberg Chicago – Meyer Collection


Landsberg’s Pure Blackberry Brandy

LANDSBERG’S  PURE BLACKBERRY BRANDY, A. HELLER & BRO. NEW YORK,

Deep Blue Aqua, 11 ½”. Applied top, smooth base, This aqua Landsberg variant is a wonderful bottle with the look of a dignified eastern piece, lots of decoration, a master mold maker’s work of art. These aren’t a whole lot different in an embossing pattern than the Landsberg Century Bitters. You can see the 1876 embossed with the eagle on the front and a series of stars surrounding the neck area. On the reverse is a setting sun with the rays shooting out into the sky. Crossed swords, cannon balls, a tomahawk and a cannon adorn the four corners and if that isn’t enough, there is a series of adornment on each side corner.

Landsberg’s Pure Blackberry Brandy – Meyer Colection

Landsberg Corner Detail

Landsberg’s Brandy Typography Detail

Moses G. Landsberg

Moses G. Landsberg is associated with some of the finest American antique bottles ever made. They are extremely ornate and finely detailed and are considered prized collectibles. Unfortunately, much about Landsberg remains a mystery.

What we do know is that Landsberg is of Jewish ancestry and was born in New York around 1844. Nothing is known about his parents or when he or they came to America. Of course, New York City was a great jumping off point for many immigrants, especially from Germany. Many arrived seeking religious or political freedom, others for economic opportunities greater than those in Europe, and others for the chance to start fresh in the New World.

Landsberg was apparently a traveling man as we first see him listed as a clerk, probably in a liquor store, at 47 Public Landing in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1870. Cincinnati was a preferred destination for many Germans, if Landsberg was German. He was boarding at a place called Spencer House which leads me to believe he was not living with his family. We see this situation repeating during his life and migration from city to city. In 1871, he is still clerking at a new address, 15 Sycamore in Cincinnati and boarding at 123 Main Street. In 1873, he is found in Cleveland, Ohio listed as an agent for Harris & Zilch (Henry Harris and John Zilch). They were liquor dealers located at 199 Ontario.

This experience clerking and being an agent or salesman for a liquor business leads Moses Landsberg next to New York City where in early 1875 he is selling liquor at his own con-cern at 169 E. Broadway. Shortly thereafter, in 1875, he takes on a partner and the busi-ness is called Landsberg, Kantrowitz & Company consisting of Moses G. Landsberg and Isaac Kantrowitz. They are at the same Broadway address. That same year, a Gerson Landsberg, who is a man of the cloth, is living at 236 E 54th Street in New York City. I be-lieve this is a brother of Moses.

Moses Landsberg next heads to the Windy City and we see him listed as Landsberg & Company (Moses G. Landsberg & Gerson Landsberg) selling flour at 118 Blue Island Ave-nue in Chicago, Illinois. Moses is boarding at the Atlantic Hotel in Chicago while Gerson Landsberg is noted in the Chicago directory as living in New York City.

It is in Chicago in 1882 where Moses G. Landsberg files a Patent and Design for a Bottle which is Landsberg Century Bitters. The patent is Design No. 12861 dated April 11, 1882. That same year, a newspaper notice puts Moses Landsberg as a guest at the Park Hotel in Chicago. It is assumed that the brand was first concocted in 1876 as it is embossed on the two variants of the Landsberg Century Bitters bottles.

In 1883, again in Chicago, Landsberg files another Patent and Design for a Bottle which is the Landsberg “Sphinx Bitters.” It is Design No. 13699 dated March 6, 1883.

In 1884, Landsberg is back to being listed as a traveling salesman addressed at 24 Syca-more in Cincinnati, Ohio. He is boarding at Hexter’s Hotel. I guess he was selling his way east as he was back in New York City in 1886 living at 297 E 109th. His next occupation, in 1888, is that of an editor in New York City. He is now living at 261 E 122nd.

In 1891, Landsberg is living in Boston, Massachusetts and he is the editor of the Jewish Chronicle. In 1892, he publishes the History of the Persecution of the Jews in Russia. In 1893 he is living at 34 School, Room D in Boston. Next he moves back to New York City and becomes the editor of the Jewish Herald. He continues in this position until his dealth on 23 January 1900 in Manhattan. He was 56 years old.


MGL “Sphinx” 

(Mortar and Pestle) / “M.G.L.” (monogram) – (Griffin) / (Front view of the Sphinx) / (Human Headed Lion).

Landsberg “Sphinx”

(Mortar and Pestle) / “M.G.L.” (monogram) – (Griffin) / (Front view of the Sphinx) / (Human Headed Lion). The neck in the form of an Egyptian Obelisk is covered with hieroglyphics as is other areas of the bottle. (unlisted), Illinois, ca. 1883 – 1885, yellow amber, 12 1/4”h, smooth base, applied double collar mouth. – Glass Works Auctions | Auction #126

Read More: Another Patended Landsberg Bottle

Read More: Ladies and Gentlemen… the Landsberg Sphinx Bottles

Posted in Auction News, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Color Runs, Figural Bottles, Spirits | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

My Vote for the Best Bottle Color Description of the Year!

hmmm….I don’t know…this looks more like “early summer squash with a granny smith apple sauce wash”

Posted in Auction News, Bitters, Color Runs, Figural Bottles, Humor - Lighter Side | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

World’s Largest Collection of Hanging Glass Fly Traps on eBay

Here is an unusual one on eBay today that caught my attention. I’m here in the departure lounge at BWI Airport in Baltimore waiting to catch a flight home to Houston and searching the web to kill time and I find this listing. You have to admit, this is some pretty glass with some cool embossing. This guy really photographed and wrote this up nicely.

[eBay Listing]

It is not often that you get a chance to buy a world class collection of anything, much less something as obscure and unique as hanging glass fly traps. As best I know from contact with other collectors, this is the largest single collection of hanging types in the world. A researcher in Spain has put together a database to register known embosses and forms but he has done this by copying photos on the web (many of which came from my listings) and by contributors sending in info and photos. Currently there are 14 in this collection that are not yet listed on his site.

The collection I’m offering is 83 unique traps. There are a few doubles where I have both a clear and an amethyst but for the most part either the emboss or form are noticeably different from one another. In over 15 years of antique dealing I have sold literally thousands of these traps, brought some of them back from Europe in my carry on for added protection and had the opportunity to pick through hoards of them for special ones for the collection. Unique might be a new emboss or a crude manufacturing feature or just the best mint example available. Some traps I have only run across one of and had to accept its condition as is (gladly) and some certain types all seemed to suffer from haze, but without question, this is as near a collection of mint examples as you will see. One hand blown example has a small flash and another hand worked trap has a small chip on the lip. Otherwise the only surprises are restricted to mostly small amounts of haze or manufacturing defects which are unique and often outstanding (swing etc). There are a few that will improve with a washing.

There are 23 that were blown by hand/mouth into a mold, most often a 4 piece type unique to fly traps or two piece molds and subsequently turned in the mold as was popular with bottles in the 1880’s. There are 53 in all with embossing and of these there are a few with pictorial embossings, such as my favorite, the cross. There is also a coat of arms/shield, a bean pot, a crown and interlocking initials. I have only seen one that could have been embossed with a date. It is PERIS 1883. The fellow I got it from swore it was a manufacture date but I’m more likely to believe it was an important date for that family/farm as the trap it adorns is not a hand manufactured example but an automatic bottle machine type made a few decades later.

The majority of these traps were used to combat the fruit fly in Europe at the end of the 19th and first quarter of the last century. As utilitarian items, most were blown in a clear glass. If the element used to make the batch clear was manganese it would also subsequently be responsible for the glass turning deep amethyst after expose to ultraviolet light. If selenium was used, the result was a honey amber. Though most of these amethyst/amber examples were artificially exposed to get this effect, there are a few in the group (noted in the legend) which are naturally sun colored from long expose to daylight. The aqua were blown as colored.

If these were tabletop traps of distinction, I might use the proceeds to put a child through college, but I had to sell all of those to pay the bills so the resulting collection is one that won’t break the bank to own and is guaranteed to be a conversation starter. Short of bleeding cups there aren’t many other more unique glass items from antiquity than these.

The double sided bookcase they are displayed on is included in the lot but no shipping on that (unless you pay the packers to come do it). You would have to pick it up if you want it. I will pack and ship the traps for a nominal handling charge for the time it takes. Or, you can come and pack them if you prefer. I’ve entered $200 flat rate for shipping the traps which I figure woud go in 4 boxes of 40 lbs. each. If there is excess beyond a reasonable handling amount it will be refunded, but more often I underestimate, which if that is the case I would expect the additional monies needed to facilitate shipping. I would drive up to one hour to meet with the traps and bookcase if wanted.

Please email if you have any questions or want further photos. Because of using studio lights to take the full shots of the bookcase, there were shadows created behind the traps which don’t accurately depict how they display. Also, much of the variations in form etc are too subtle to really grasp in these photos. Color is also tough to peg but I got it nailed for my LG monitor. What they come out as on yours could be from slightly to very different.

Below is a listing of all traps along with a legend below it that defines color, form, then any remaining letters are for desirable characteristics then the few condition issues. Unless otherwise noted, the embosses are inside of an embossed circle. A sampling of emboss photos are provided. More on request.

1.EFV – A – FT – PS (on trap cone, with radiations which occurred in cooling)

2.GA – A – C – H

3.No 300 – AG – B – L

4.No 200 – AG – B

5.Bean pot (pictorial) with AJ superimposed / on opposite side a cross – A – G – DE

6.JMG – A – A

7.BANDRES BONO – C – A – SB, C, T

8.CR – A – A

9.BSG – A – A – S

10.LPR – A – A – W, B, SB, PS

11.Bean pot (pictorial) with AJ superimposed / on opposite side C.E. – A – G – S, DE

12.GT – C – A

13.JCA – A – A – H

14.HR – A – A – TC

15.SOLER – A – A – TC, CT, SB

16.JS (interlocking) – A – A – SW, W

17.TORRES – A – A – W, CT

18.Pictorial coat of arms – AG – P – B, W

19.PERIS 1883 – A – A – CT

20.HDAD CORBERA – A – A – H

21.PEDRO PASQUAL – C – A – SW, SB

22.E with FV below – A – F – S, W

23.ESCARTI – C – A – S, CT

24.ESCARTI – A – A – S, B, CT

25.S.A. above a B. – A – F – W

26.S.A. above a B. – C – F – SB

27.LPR – C – A – SB

28.LL – A – A – CT

29.COOPERATIVA ALGEMISI – A – A – W

30.JMO – A – A – H

31.PAULINO HERRERO – SM – B – W, B

32.VC – A – C – S, CT

33.VC – C – C – S

34.AA – A – L – W

35.ESCARTI ALGEMISI – C – Q – W, S, CT

36.ET – A – FT – S, W

37.VITAL – C – L – W

38.F.C.R – A – Q – W

39.CR – A – A – SW

40.ARP – A – C – SW, CT

41.IO – A – C – S

42.EFM with a dot below it (letters larger than below listed EFM) – A – A – S, CT, GG

43.3 M.M.M. – A  with PATENTADO below – YA – D – T

44.3 MMM PATENTADO with a pictorial crown & CN interlocking below – SA – D – B, DE, H

45.3 MMM – A PATENTADO with an empty circle below (also no periods on Ms) – C – D

46.ARJONA – A – A – SB, W, TC

47.VCS – A – A – SB, SL

48.EAG – C – FT – W

49.R. ESPANA with a dot separating from ALCIRA another dot – SM – A – SL, W

50.JGM – A – A – SB, SL, H

51.MMS – C – A – SL, CT, W

52.EFM (smaller letters, no dot) – A – A – SL, W, CT, SB, T

53.REVA – A – A – CT, SL, H

The following traps, though sometimes embossed with an empty circle, have no other embossing.

1.Empty rectangle – A – E – B, 3/4 F, H

2.C – I –   AL, TM

3.Empty circle – YA – R – BIM, CT, SB, W, GT

4.A – L – TM, TC, GT

5.A – L – TM, CT (wide), B, GT

6.SA – B – W, L, H

7.Empty circle – A – R (skittle) – W, SW, H

8.Empty circle – AG – B – W, TC

9.C – B

10.Empty circle – A – A – CT, T

11.Two empty circles opposite sides – A – R – DE

12.AG – P – S, W, CB

13.Large empty oval – A – O – W, H

14.Large empty oval – AG – O – W, SB

15.Empty circle – A – B – SW, W

16.Empty circle – A – FT – SW, W, GT

17.AB – R – W, B, SW

18.A – K – B, GT

19.A – L – BIM, TM, 3/4 F, GT

20.A – A – B, L, W, SW

21.Empty oval – A – F – W, H

22.Empty circle – SA – C

23.A – N – Jagged cone edge (done in manufacture), H

24.Empty circle – A – Q – W, B, SW, GT

25.C – K – B, CT

Legend: Emboss (unless otherwise noted, all are in a circle) – Color – Body Style – Desirable Characteristics, Condition (if other than near mint).

Colors:

A = Amethyst (done by intentional exposure to artificial ultraviolet light), SA = Sun colored Amethyst (naturally colored by long exposure to the sun), SM = Smokey Amethyst (amethyst with some gray tones), C = Clear, YA = Yellow/Amber, AG = Aqua/Green, AB = Aqua/Blue

Body Types:

A = The most common large trap, B = Small trap with a roll-type lip, C = Just like B but with a more traditional lip, D = Squat, flat, stackable, E = Globe (unique), F = Blown in 4 piece mold, G = Genie bottle, I = Grooved body (unique), Q = Medium sized trap, J = Hand blown, K = Minnow trap, L = small inverted cone, N = Squat body, heavy glass and roll-type lip, O = Wide body, FT = 4 piece, tall, R = unique, P = Wide body with a thin lip

Desirable Characteristics:

W = Whittle, B = Bubbles, SW = Swirls, CT = Crude trap cone, L = lean, SL = slump, PS = Pot stone, SB = seed bubbles, S = Swing/Bridge, T = Texture, DE = double emboss, TC = tall trap cone, GG = extraneous glob of glass, AL = Applied Lip, TM = Turned in mold, BIM = Hand blown into a mold, GT = Ground top, CB = Crude base

Most traps will have at least some bubbles. I am only noting with a B, the ones that have more than average numbers. Slump refers to an area in the glass that pulled away from the mold, leaving a slumped-in depression. Whittle refers to a wavy appearance to the glass as if it were blown in a mold whittled from wood. Texture can be similar to whittle except you must be able to feel it.

Condition Issues:

H = Haze (only noted if more than 10% of the trap is affected), F = Flash (fracture which does not reach the surface)This years Downieville Bottle Show is slated for the weekend of September 10th.

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A Couple of Big Standouts in Heckler 93 Auction

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Downieville 2011

All…This is a FUN show….well worth the trip because of the nature, geography, people, history, food, wine and bottles! I had a BLAST last year!

From Rick Simi at Western Bitters News:

This years Downieville Bottle Show is slated for the weekend of September 10th.

The festivities kick off on Friday afternoon with a wine tasting event followed by a western style barbecue at the “Old Downieville Brewery” and home of Rick & Cherry Simi on Main Street. All show dealers and their guests are welcome at the tasting and BBQ. Read the rest at Western Bitters News.

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