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Vintage Contemporary L.S.Smith (Pinwheel & Hobstar) Carnival Glass Creamer

$ 2.63

Availability: 35 in stock
  • Color: Amethyst
  • Brand: L.E. Smith
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Type: Collector Creamer
  • Style: Mid-Century Modern
  • Glassmaking Technique: Fused
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Time Period Manufactured: 1950-1959
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Object Type: Creamer
  • Type of Glass: Carnival
  • Material: Glass
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Original/Reproduction: Vintage Original
  • Condition: Pre-owned by Me, I have been collecting Carnival Glass for over 45 years and in the near future my collection of over 650 plus pieces will be coming up for Auction. This L.S.Smith Creamer is in Great condition with NO Chips, Cracks or Flea Bites

    Description

    Here is a Vintage Contemporary Signed L.S.Smith (Pinwheel and Hobstar)  Amethyst Carnival Glass Creamer. this creamer is 3 1/2" tall which is near the rim of the spout by 5 1/2" long from the stout to the end of the handle by 3 5/8" wide across the top rim by 2 3/4" across the base. Inside bottom is signed with the letter (S) and this creamer has (4) mold marks were it was Fused together. This creamer is Pre-owned by Me, I have been collecting Carnival Glass for over 45 years and in the near future my collection of over 650 plus pieces will be coming up for Auction. This L.S.Smith Creamer is in Great condition with NO Chips, Cracks or Flea Bites.
    The L.E. Smith Glass Company was founded by "Lew" Smith in Jeannette, Pennsylvania, in 1907, the company is better known for the glassware
    it produced from 1910 to 1921 at its factory in nearby Mount Pleasant. There, L.E. Smith manufactured mustard jars (along with the mustard that filled them), fruit jars,
    jelly jars, and headlights for Henry Ford's Model T,
    among many other products.
    By 1920, Smith, whose namesake founder had left the company in 1911, had purchased a new factory in Greensburg, which is a bit closer to Jeannette than Mount Pleasant. It was in Greensburg that the company made a range of milk glass
    pieces, from figural animals
    to vases and planters. L.E. Smith was also known for its small novelty glass items, from tiny pianos
    and pistols to diminutive telephones,
    many of which were sold as containers for candy.
    Other mainstays of the Smith catalog during these years were lamps,
    both oil
    and electric, whose pressed-glass shades and bodies were manufactured in a range of colors. Smith even made electric lamps in the shapes of sailboats,
    melding novelty with utility.
    In the 1960s, Smith re-issued a number of its own prewar lamps, and by 1971 it had finally jumped back on the carnival-glass
    bandwagon that had begun in 1907 by Fenton
    and in 1908 by Northwood.
    The first pieces of L.E. Smith carnival glass were actually commemorative plates bearing the profiles of John F. Kennedy
    and Abraham Lincoln. Plates honoring Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis, a nod, presumably, to customers living in the former confederate states,
    followed, as did the plate showing the back of a Morgan silver dollar.
    Your item will be sent Priority Mail this way because I can Insure the Item. In the past items sent out in First Class mail got lost or were tampered with at the Post Office.
    Payment is due within 7 days after the auction ends. I prefer PayPal. I will combine shipping if you purchase multiple items from me. Everything I sell comes from a Smoke-Free Home.
    In the event the item is not what you expected or you are dissatisfied with it, you will have 60-Days buyer-Paid returns and you will be refunded the purchase price plus original postage.
    When sending the item out, if I can make it cheaper then the quoted price I will just refund you the difference to your PayPal account as I have done in the past!