All About Glass: The Voice of the Glass Collecting Community. Vol. 1, no. 2, Julyl 2003. Articles include:

Why Is It Called Vaseline Glass? By Dave Peterson.

 Nude Stems. By Helen Jones.

Identifying Some Unidentifiables (Potomac Glass Co., Maryland Glass Co, Utility Glass Co.) By Dale Murschell.

The Open Back Frog Salt Dip/Small Ashtray (Quality Glass, Cambridge). By David Schepps.

Tableware of the Diamond Glass Company, Montreal--Part 1. By Sid Lethbridge.

Flower Frogs. By Dean Six.

The 1880-1980 Ball Fruit Jar. By Nick Davis.

Those Confusing Tarentum Patterns and Their Many Names. By Tom Bredehoft.

Imperial Glass Candlewick Eagle Design. By Juanita L. Williams.

Royal Gem--Northwood Line No. 403. By Lee Marple.

WV Glass Tour--2003. By Jeff Conover.

The C. F. Monroe Co. Parker Salts. By Bob & Carole Bruce.

And much more.

31 pages, including color. Domestic postage is $1.25 for each issue. For overseas shipping costs, please contact the seller. To receive future issues of our acclaimed quarterly magazine, please consider becoming a member of the West Virginia Museum of American Glass.

About the West Virginia Museum of American Glass, Ltd. (WVMAG)

The West Virginia Museum of American Glass, Ltd. is a non-profit museum with a mission to share the diverse and rich heritage of glass as a product and historical object as well as telling of the lives of glass workers, their families and communities, and of the tools and machines they used in glass houses.

WVMAG, Ltd. is located in Weston, West Virginia. The Museum includes representative samples of all glass products...from bottles to lightening rod balls,  from telegraph insulators to glass used in automobiles, from pressed to blown tableware.  We preserve the history of the places and people who made these products. 

Our Museum examines the rich history of some of America's most famous glass factories,  while at the same time carefully understanding the impact that the hundreds of smaller and often time forgotten glass houses made on the history of the glass industry.

The WVMAG displays many of the diverse and beautiful objects produced by factories during the past century.  The museum attempts to compare and contrast similar pieces produced by once competing companies.  No other public collection offers such contrasts on a large scale.


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