This etch is a real winner, just beautiful with a big urn in the center of scrolls. It is another design that has no pattern name, just a number, #739.
I love this etch and the footed mushroom console bowl is exquisite. This bowl is the only piece I have had in this pattern and it is sold.
The Cambridge pattern catalog reprint book, The Cambridge Glass Co., Cambridge, Ohio 1930-1934, issued by The Cambridge Collectors of America Inc, includes this pattern. They show it on dinnerware, accessory pieces and stemware.
My impression (which may be totally off base) is that Cambridge sold more of these less well-known patterns, the border etches we’re looking at in this series, in accessory pieces like this console bowl. They may have put their marketing oomph into other patterns or perhaps were not as savvy as Fostoria was about selling dinnerware and matched sets.
Replacements lists very few pieces in green, pink, blue, crystal and Mandarin yellow, with pieces on the Decagon blank and the curvy 1094 blank. They show line drawings of stemware on stem 3130 but no photographs of real pieces, leading me to think stemware is scarce.
If you like this pattern, then I recommend you include a few pieces as you find them. I suspect it would be very difficult to gather a set that is enough to use for lunch or stemware for dinner. That should not be a concern though since the colors blend with all the other patterns that Cambridge made during the early 1930s and a few accessory pieces would be stunning in any home.