The creation of millefiori patterns in glass was a time-consuming technique that took skill and patience. Thin canes of different colours were heated together in a certain order, producing the flower patterns, hence the name millefiori meaning thousand flowers. It was then fuse into one larger cane and stretched to reduce the size of the imagery and left to cool. The cane was then sliced into small discs and formed into beads or placed across a hot glassware vessel. The vessel would be blown for a second time to merge the pieces of glass and then left to cool in the desired shape. This process was originally discovered by the Egyptians when producing Millefiori glass and then later developed by the Greeks and Romans.
Romano-Egyptian Millefiori Glass Fragment
£ 325.00
A Romano-Egyptian glass opaque fragment featuring white flowers along with red, white and yellow flowers on a dark blue background. Surrounding each flower is yellow and light green streaks. The pattern is replicated on the reverse. This piece has been mounted on a custom-made stand.
Provenance: Gallery Mikazuki prior 1984, property of a London gentleman
Condition: Excellent condition with minimal pitting to the surface. The glass itself weighs 4.6grams and is 2.7cm wide and 3cm high.
In stock
| Weight | 31.3 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | W 2.7 x H 5.4 cm |
| Culture | |
| Glass | |
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