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“The Fenton factory was founded in 1905 ... “People like the unusual colors, and it falls in the Carnival glass category.” WHAT IS IT WORTH TODAY? Loudon estimates the piece is worth ...
Sold: July 30, 2005 Value: $1,500 Not all carnival glass was made by Millersburg, Northwood, or Fenton. Imperial made this ...
Why they’re special: Carnival glass had its heyday around the turn of the last century. The Fenton Art Glass Co., which opened in 1905 in West Virginia, turned out thousands of pieces of the ...
some shades of Carnival glass and some Depression glass pieces also have uranium dioxide content in their coloring, according to Alice. While the length of time that Fenton Art Glass has been ...
Look for a maker's mark in carnival glass Among the pioneers was Fenton Glass Co., an early innovator that blossomed in 1907 with the introduction of carnival glass. It subsequently produced a ...
Fenton’s pattern is found in carnival-glass colors of marigold, blue, green, amethyst, white, aqua, lavender and red. The Fenton pattern has a “bearded berry” reverse pattern and a large bee ...
If there is a single material that plays an ornamental role in almost every home in America, it is glass. We all have some, whether in artwork, bowls, drinking vessels, pitchers, statuary ...
Fenton and Robert Fenton ... “There’s a lot of excitement about the vase all over the glass world.” Carnival glass also is known as poor man’s Tiffany, aurora glass or taffeta glass ...
Carnival glass originated as a glass called Iridill, produced in 1908 by the Fenton Art Glass Company. Iridill was inspired by the fine blown art glass of makers like Tiffany and Steuben ...