How to Date Atlas Jars - Know About Life - noahsnetcom

Hazel-Atlas Glass Company - GLASS BOTTLE MARKS

Since I don't know if there is a real difference in the cover is made by Atlas and Ball (and I'm assuming that replacement cover sold separately retail, use of, on one of these types of glasses, which may have been made by other companies as well?), I would advise you to try posting a query on the antique-bottles-net page, where many of the experienced antique glass collectors posts to read it daily. The shining is a case of sick glass, caused by influences of the environment in the humid conditions over a long period of time. Some collectors are not lump them together with the so-called Hoosier jars orHoosier Cabinet jars, although the glasses to cabinets as an accessory, the Hoosier are really quite the same. (A search on Google images, pictures of different types of glasses as the Hoosier glasses). They seem especially popular in the early to mid-20th century and are usually of white or off-white milkglass. This diagram is from a trade journal of the 1950s: diagram of Hazel-Atlas base codes on the containers, with the kind permission of fruitjar.org. Bubbles can blow up the bandwidth from the small seeds bubbles (like champagne fizz) for medium-sized to very large, misshapen, diamond, Oval or oblong-pear-shaped. From what I can find, I'm online, it's from Hazel Atlas bottle, does anyone know what the purpose is. As long as the manufacturer, the product felt, nor do they lead for their intended use, you are allowed a certain amount of bubbles in the finished product. (Bubbles are sometimes seen in the upscale dishes-EAPG of the time, but not nearly as often in this type of glassware). You could try looking on ebay over a period of time, and the advice of the realized prices are above the Completed auctions search, for the average current values. Sorry I can not answer your questions with certainty, but I would suspect that the lenses date from sometime in the 1920s-1940s period. I would like to know what the original manufacturers' terms were for these glasses, but I honestly don't know. (If anyone knows, please contact me). The best bet is to try to search for similar bottles on ebay and check the actual completed auction prices, or the list itself and see what it brings. It was under my mother-in-law's things you on a regular basis for the canning industry, so I know it is old (she told me before she died that it was old and not to throw). Just a question of possible dates for the glass could have been made or how can I locate information on it. Thank you. Of course, the older are in the aqua or bluish-green, the newer lid in clear glass (most likely from the middle or the end of the 1930s).

Dating Hazel Atlas Mason Jars

I would think that it was mean, it was before the merger, but from what I've read, they were. So-called sick-glass can range from a very low inertia to a very intense rainbow iridescence, such as the appearance of gasoline on a puddle. Anyone who tells you a particular bottle is worth a certain, specific amount of money is informed either honestly wrong or a liar. The bottle is 4.5 inches tall, less than 1 inch thick, and the width varies from 2 inches at the shoulder, 1.5 cm above the base up to 2 cm in the base. I suppose they were for home-canning, AND sold to food companies, as a packer glasses (sold in the shops, the product inside). Price guides published, collectors bottles only guides, and only a very, very small percentage of bottles are known. My husband works for a dredging company, and brings home the vintage bottles all the time, but this one has me stumped. It is pretty common, and is of interest to me, because it is identical in many respects to the glass on the island of Nikumororo by the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery.

Dating Hazel Atlas Mason Jars

This is especially noticeable on a lot of the machine-made clear glass Container from the early 20th century, although the most ordinary inexpensive glass is potentially subject to this effect to a certain degree. After searching through many websites, I came across her, put two and two, and found out that my bottle was made by Hazel-Atlas. The glasses have markings on the bottom, with the letter H and large letter A in the lower half of the H, the I definitely Hazel Atlas. You have devoted you may have better luck consulting a detailed reference work on the Hazel-Atlas, or a Website specifically for the Hazel-Atlas glass company, or depression-era glass. The original glasses was a bit lighter, more subtle shade of cobalt blue called ritz blue, and the newer repros (most, if not all of them) are a darker, stronger or harder cobalt blue color. And the new stuff can be sold with the same temperatures as the old (or new, borosilicate glass PYREX, which is in Europe). In this case, the 39 a liquor bottle approval number associated with Hazel-Atlas and 55 is a year-date code for 1955. I'm not sure about the interpretation of all the markings on many of their Container, so I can only pass you your glass dates back to sometime between 1923 (when Hazel-Atlas should have started the actual use of your H A trademark) and 1964. Most of the glass-starts the acquisition of a weak, microscopically thin, whitish spot on the outer side of the glass, if it's buried long enough. This is a result of the hand-made methods as well as the fast-paced production, where there are less stringent quality control.