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Tiffany designer’s glass studio work

Acentury has passed since the Paris World’s Fair of 1900 when Peter Carl Fabergé, Louis Comfort Tiffany and René Lalique introduced their decorative objects to a world enthralled by Art Nouveau.

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Fabergé eggs, Lalique’s sculptures of women turning into butterflies and lamps by Tiffany whose shades were masterpieces of handmade glass were fantastic then.

They are even more prized now that such time-consuming craftsmanship is almost unimaginable and the work from that era – now true antiques – have become immensely valuable.

But not untouchable.

And that’s not because the Legion of Honor in San Francisco is exhibiting the works of the three decorators, but because Alan Schneider, owner of Antique Traders, has the biggest collection of Tiffany glassware west of the Mississippi River.

You can touch them. And he doesn’t charge admission.

He doesn’t expect you to buy anything, either, especially because the cheapest Tiffany lamp in the store is $9,000.

“If, during the three months of the show, I get 200 people to come here, even if they don’t buy anything, but they appreciate everything, that does it for me,” he said. “It’s a feather in my cap.”

Schneider is just totally in love with Art Nouveau decorative art, and his shop on California Street and Fifth Avenue is a museum of the period. “This is a lifetime of collecting,” he said. “Thirty-eight years.”

A native San Franciscan, Schneider knew nothing about art before traveling to Europe in 1970. He had been working in insurance, but he brought home a few antique pieces and opened shop. He slowly became enthralled with the natural themes and femininity of the Art Nouveau motifs.

He started investing in Handel and Pairpoint lamps, American-made lamps from the period that used a reverse painting technique on the inside of shades that were stunning when lit.

“I could buy them for $500 and $1,000, and they were like Tiffanies,” he said.

About 20 years ago, he bought his first Tiffany for about $5,000 and began to collect them at a rapid pace. In the past two years, he doubled his collection of lamps – he has about 45 at an average value of $85,000 each – and Favrile glassware – accessory pieces such as vases, goblets, plates, candlesticks and desk items – which number about 150 and are worth from $350 to $20,000 apiece.

Schneider says the Legion of Honor show includes three stunning lamps – a peacock, a butterfly and a wisteria – but the rest are so-so.

“Knowing Tiffany, it’s not the best I have seen,” he said.

Masterpieces

After years of looking at the New York designer’s glass studio work, Schneider is certain when he’s seen a masterpiece emerge from a field of top-quality pieces.

His $100,000-plus peony is one such piece, done on the particular artist’s good day.

“It’s multicolored. They were all well done, but the glass they used in this one is mottled. There is great differentiation between the colors they used in the way the sheets of glass were put together,” he said. “It’s incredible.”

Schneider can carry on exuberantly about most everything in his store, three rooms in 1,400 square feet that are fairly stuffed with treasures from the Art Nouveau period of 1880 to 1920.

Impressive inventory

His inventory of lamps and glassware includes Duffner and Kimberly, Handel, Pairpoint, Bradley and Hubbard, Moe Bridges, Classique and the French studios of Daum Nancy and Émile Gallé, including several of the artist’s signature layered glass with cutaway designs.

Schneider’s collection of stained and beveled glass windows comes from many sources – but no churches, he says – and is among the largest in the country.

He has three Tiffany windows, including one of a woman in a Grecian gown gazing out of a grove of trees as she draws water from a fountain.

To Schneider, the scene is realistic despite its obvious formal abstraction, and it’s a quality he says Tiffany gave to every piece of glass composition that had a natural theme.

Whether depicting a tulip, peony, daffodil, dogwood or pomegranate on a shade, the copper and leaded edges of the glass were curved, Schneider noted, “not jagged, like in a reproduction.”

Though the notion of a Tiffany lamp is well known from the heavy production of copies in the 1970s for family rec rooms and fern bars, eyeing the real thing is a different experience.

Subtle colors

Besides the subtlety in shaping the pattern outlines, there’s the way Tiffany graduated the color scheme on a single lamp shade.

“People don’t even realize how good this is,” Schneider said as he caressed the shade of a 16-inch geometric patterned shade with heavily mottled, dicrolic glass. “Look how it goes from a mustard blue to a lighter blue to a lot more blue to total blue.”

All Tiffany lamps have decorative bronze bases that are artistic tour-de-forces as well. “I will switch shades and bases sometimes. Some lamps went with bases, but you could also choose shade to go with a base. They (Tiffany) had a studio and people could say I want that and that.”

Schneider’s collection of Tiffany lamps includes turtlebacks, the large chunks of glass that resemble a turtle’s shell; damascenes, with blown-glass shades that exude a marbleized or flowing water pattern; and the draped stained-glass shades called linen fold.

His large collection of Favrile pieces exhibits another part of Tiffany artistry: the ability to blow design patterns into the glass piece.

Schneider has one locked case from which he pulls out one after another – a pedestal compote dish with a wide ridged edge in tones of blue, cream and peach, or an 8-inch oval vase with leaves and vines swirling around it in greens and golds, iridescent with a satin finish. “It cost $20 when it was made,” Schneider said. “Now, it’s worth $9,000.”

And to top it off, Schneider boasts possession of one of the most valuable Tiffanies around: a blue jack-in-the-pulpit vase, considered one of the designer’s most distinct sculptural pieces. “There’s only one other in the country,” he said. “They are extremely rare.”

Schneider has advertised his store widely in all the proper journals and hopes to sell about half of his stock to serious collectors during the course of the Legion of Honor show. And that’s why it’s a good idea to check out his Tiffanies now. A second chance may never come again.

“The people that come in to buy, they will want a piece of history,” he said, “especially because of the economy. They are a major investment. I cannot foresee the future, but in 20 years, they will double or triple in value.”

Jewellery Trends In Different Countries And Cultures

This week we are going to take a look at jewellery trends in different cultures and countries. We will of course look back at history to see how it helped mold the jewelry fashion industry into what it is today. Tiffany Co is always leading to the trend of modern jewelry world. We will focus on specific countries throughout this week and then showcase of few of Gilbert and Frech’s uniquely original designs and see how the influence of style and culture helped to create them.

Some of the earliest pieces of jewellery that were created out of precious metals and gemstones were found in the country of Egypt. Egyptians mainly used gold and fashioned many items out of this very malleable metal such as armlets, bracelets, head adornments, rings, earrings and even collars. Some tiffany designer get the inspiration of tiffany earrings from Egypt.

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Greece also was making their own fashion trends during the BC era and the trend at that time was using beads and designing them into shapes that represented nature such as flowers, shells or beetles. Greece was wealthy with raw materials and started adorning their jewelry with precious gemstones such as rubies, emeralds and pearls. Pearls became the most prized and precious gemstone in jewelry, as well as in tiffanys. The most rare and beautiful were found in South India and the Persian Gulf. During the 17th century is when jewelry became an adornment that was acceptable in everyday use. France was a great influence on the jewelry industry during the early 1800’s. Victorian jewelry became popular as Queen Victoria reigned and it began to be massed produced and sold all over the world.

During the 1950’s America made its mark with what people would refer to as the Hollywood influence.
Over the years many countries had their influence over the style and trends of Jewelry. As it was created and shipped to different parts of the world, other cultures added their own unique flare. It will be fun to take a look this week at specific countries and see what the popular jewelry trend is in their culture today! Will it be similar to what is popular here in America or will it be completely unique and different? The world has become smaller with the birth of the internet. We can get our favorite tiffany jewellery from the net with some clicks to the mouse. Every kind of information is available to us know with just the tapping of our fingertips. Just like that, we can type in and order whatever kind of tiffany rings or other kinds we like from whatever country or culture we want. It is truly an amazing thing.

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My Lovely Jewellery

It is believed that every girl has their own Jewellery, these jewellery make them even more dazzling, colorfully bright. My jewelry box also contains colorful beautiful ornaments, and stories of the Tiffany Jewellery behind some origins can be savored.

The Tiffany Bracelets, a very delicate entirely, my husband bought for me when it was my first birthday after we were in love with each other.On that day,it was the first special day we encountered and also the first time we wandered round the street together,so my husband was especially generous. As long as I saw specially favorite things, or he thought it as beautiful (such as this bracelet) ,he told to me nobly :”take it “.As a matter of fact, we had just begun our career at that time and we had less money in our pockets. I remember he bought an article flower ring and a fashionable watch for me in addition to this bracelet on that day (unfortunately they have been broken). Although things are very cheap and three samples did not add up to more than 50 yuan , but On that day, I was really very happy and satisfied.

The Tiffany Rings is a nice surprise my husband gave to me when he returned back from Tianjin after three months’ driving license training last year .i thought it as a surprise to me because I had ever told him I did not want a diamond ring for marriage,and I thought that an ordinary one was also ok to us . Besides I am a person paying attention to cost-effective,and I was not keen on the sumptuous things at all in my heart,what’more,I had ever said:” to buy a diamond ring is not as good as to buy other practical thins with the saved money,however he eventually bought one for me and before that I was not told about this.

In any case, I was still grateful to this, but it was not the real reason I felt surprised and pleasant. About this I have to remember our love experince ,it was not a long time since we fell in love ,once he said to me excitedly in the lodging house :”you must promise to marry me “.(and later the marrige was a matter of course in love, he no longer proposed to me in a ceremony as he had completed that before),I did not wihstand his repeatedly beg but to agree in the end. Without my expectation, he was very excited to say:” he had to start saving money from now on “. I asked for the reason, he explained that he would buy a diamond ring for me with the saved money. It was very clear that we were only New Staff who just left college and we had no savings, what’ more ,salary was not high,so such luxurydiamond ring is still a distant thing for us .At that time I considered the word as only a psychological satisfaction but it did not have any practical significance. However some years later, he used his efforts to practice the original promise, which really made me be moved deeply.

The Tiffany Necklaces was a gift from my mother-in-law, she bought for me when she came to Shang Hai to see our new room last year when she was only my prospective mother-in-law.Although now it is very common for the mother-in-law to buy gifts for her future daughter-in-law,besides it seems that it is also a kind of custom and tradition, however I felt somewhat embarrassed at the time when I learned she was willing to give me a necklace so I was not sure what price I should choose when I was told to pick out my favorite ,and this necklace was the first most precious jewels I had got .

The Tiffany Earrings was a gift from my aunt to express congratulations to me when I passed the university entrance examination,and I entered the university with this earring,it had accompanied me to go through a long period of time in the university, and Unfortunately, bracelets is still here, however my aunt has already been dead.

The Tiffany Bangles was bought by myself on 3th May last year .I was particularly interested in these things for some time,so I bought a lot of bangles as soon as I saw my favorite one when wandering around the street.And I do not know why the friends told me that I became more beautiful with the bangles,maybe they are especially for me in the world I think. In fact ,these bangles are made of glass-like material , they are very common and price is reasonably cheap, however most important of all ,they are very beautifuland not inferior to those precious jewels.

All my jewelries are kept in a delicate gold case ,and I place the case on the shelf of the bed.Up to now,I do not know how many times I have opened the case ,I love them deeply and I often look at one of them when I am at leisure,many many things come to my eyes,because each has its own story.