Item# MG116M
$40.00 $35.95
The Bathing Beauty Dish from Mosser Glass comes in the same fun colors for which Mosser is famous. A delightful soap dish for the bathroom, or filled with condiments, candy, nuts, and all sorts of other snacks, belongs anywhere. Length 9". Ht: 3”.
The origins of Mosser Glass go back more than half a century when Orie Mosser was the plant manager of the Cambridge Glass Company in Cambridge, Ohio. His son Thomas began working there as a teenager, learning the trade from the ground up. When Cambridge Glass closed in 1954, he decided to continue in the glass business building a company of his own. In 1959, he was finally able to begin manufacturing glassware. By 1971 he established Mosser Glass with a product line that blends new designs with timeless classics acquired from Viking, L.G. Wright and of course, Cambridge Glass. They are now the last hand-pressed glass manufacturer in the United States.
$31.95 $36.00
An elegant set of glassware, the design of the Frank Lloyd Wright Waterlilies Double Old Fashioned (Set of 2) are perfect for both everyday use and entertaining. The design for the double old fashioned glass is adapted from a drawing for a window that was never realized. The graceful pattern depicts flowers and lily pads floating on a tranquil pool...
$86.95 $96.00
The shimmering design of the Metropolitan Museum Tiffany Peacock Feather Shawl was inspired by the Louis Comfort Tiffany (American, 1848–1933) iridescent glass vase produced by Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company in 1900. The piece stylizes the "eye" of the peacock feather with rich iridescent hues gradating to a light blue surrounding the eyes. Louis Comfort Tiffany was often compelled by the...
$68.95 $78.00
The Metropolitan Museum’s elegant scarf is inspired by the John Henry Dearle (British, 1860-1932) 1896 wallpaper design titled “Compton”. John Henry Dearle was a British textile and stained-glass designer who was a chief designer of the William Morris interior design firm Morris & Co. The scarf features different shades of green, pink, and pastel blues that evokes the botanical and...
$69.95 $88.00
Frank Lloyd Wright used Teco pottery as decorative accents in many of the houses he designed. Teco (an abbreviation of TErra COtta) art pottery was originally produced from 1899-1920’s by the American Terra Cotta and Ceramics Company in Terra Cotta, Illinois. With groundbreaking shapes both architectural and organic, these high-quality reproductions maintain the integrity of the originals. Water tight with...