This is a fun pattern but it’s difficult to know exactly what pieces you need. Hocking Glass made a gazillion pieces in Block Optic green depression glass. In fact they made six different cups and five creamers and sugars and three sherbets. How to tell which is which?
Let’s look at the sherbets. The one shown is 3 inches tall, has a round bowl and a real stem. This is the one that is called (oh so imaginatively) the 3 1/4 inch sherbet. There is a taller sherbet which looks more like a saucer champagne.
The sherbet that is most common here in mid-Michigan is this cone shaped one shown below. My Gene Florence depression glass book refers to this as a non-stemmed sherbet, which is confusing since it has a stubby stem.
It’s worth knowing how to tell them apart even when a picture isn’t real clear. This shape is the same height as the first one shown, 3 inches tall, so you need to look at the general shape and the stem. There is quite a price difference too, with the stemmed sherbet running about twice what the cone shape does.