Jeannette Glass made their graceful Doric pattern in sufficient pieces to set a dinner table, including three relish tray variations and serving bowls. There is also a Doric oval platter and shakers … [Read more...]
Doric Depression Glass – Serving Bowls and Relish Trays
Jeannette made several interesting serving and accessory pieces in their popular Doric depression glass pattern. Based on the piece assortment, Jeannette most likely marketed Doric as … [Read more...]
Doric Depression Glass from Jeannette
Jeannette Glass made Doric from 1935 to 1938 inpink, green, a few pieces of Delphite blue, and a little Ultra Marine and yellow. Delphite is a translucent medium blue color and Ultra Marine is a teal … [Read more...]
Dogwood Pink or Green Depression Glass
Dogwood is so easy to identify! Look for thin pink or green glass with a mold-etched pattern of big, 4-petaled flowers all over. This Dogwood depression glass from MacBeth Evans. MacBeth Evans … [Read more...]
Cube or Cubist Pink or Green Depression Glass from Jeannette
Cube was one early depression glass patterns, mass-produced using new technology from 1929 to 1933. People mostly look for green or pink Cube and Jeannette also made some pieces in crystal, … [Read more...]
Crow’s Foot, aka Line 412 or 890, Paden City Depression Glass
Paden City produced several patterns that are some people classify as depression glass and others as elegant glass. Crow's Foot, Line 412 and 890, is a good example. This is decent quality glass … [Read more...]
Crackle Depression Glass – Make Your Drinks Look Cold
Several companies made molded Crackle patterns in the late 1920s and early 1930s; please don't confuse these with the later crackle glass from companies like Pilgrim or Blenko. Crackle depression … [Read more...]
Coronation – An Uplifting Name During the Depression
Several glass companies used names to evoke the British royal traditions during the depression era, a period when families needed something to cheer their spirits. We have Windsor, Queen Mary, Royal … [Read more...]
Colonial Fluted Rope Green Depression Glass from Federal
Colonial Fluted depression glass is easy to recognize if you remember its nickname "Rope". (To quote Hazel Marie Weatherman, "Now why did Federal want to call this pattern Colonial Fluted? Our old … [Read more...]
Cloverleaf Depression Glass from Hazel Atlas
Here is one depression glass pattern that is super easy to identify, Cloverleaf from Hazel Atlas. Unfortunately it's not that easy to find. Hazel Atlas made this popular pattern from 1930 to … [Read more...]