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Watermelon glass — as this pink and green stemware from the Great Depression is known — is as beautiful as it is difficult to find. Photo by Roger Werth / The Daily News.
Depression glass, as it came to be known, was produced in a wide range of bright colors—pink, pale blue, green, amber, and less common colors like canary, ultramarine, jadeite, delphite (opaque ...
A pink Depression-glass creamer and sugar bowl in a pattern called 'Holiday' or 'Buttons and Bows' is part of a coffee service collection that Cindy Faison keeps on her counter.
Highest listing price on eBay: $6,479 Featuring soft pink hues with a subtle cherry blossom design, Cherry Blossom depression glass was produced by the Jeanette Glass Company from 1930 to 1939 ...
A: The glass seen in images sent is pink Depression-era glass. Yes, it is collectible, and pink is a color favored by many collectors. Some call it the “classic” Depression-era glass (DEG) color.
Janine Arnesen-Nolt remembers being a little girl staring into her grandmother’s corner cupboard admiring the Depression glass inside. She liked that it was pink. Arnesen-Nolt now owns the ...
THE TERM, “DEPRESSION glass” is used to describe colored, transparent glassware made from the mid-1920s to the 1950s. There was a lot of clear glass and milk glass produced at the same time ...
PINKE via Flickr (CC BY)You’ll find depression glass in nearly every antique store, but that doesn’t mean these historical pieces are easy to come by. Created during the Great Depression, this ...
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