Glass designs were a time-consuming technique that took skill and patience. Thin canes of different colours were heated together in a certain order producing different motifs. It was then fused into one larger cane and stretched to reduce the size of the imagery, and left to cool. The cane is then sliced into smaller discs which are then formed into beads of 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 Glass Pendant
£ 265.00
A small Romano-Egyptian glass fragment pendant likely originated from a bowl or similar vessel. The glass fragment featuring a slightly translucent dark blue background with sections of vibrant red, white and green visible. It is possible this is a segment of a flower motif. The reverse displays the colours in streaks. The fragment has been placed in a modern silver frame with a loop sitting at the top for suspension. The chain is for reference only, chains available upon enquiry.
Provenance: Ex Gallery Mikazuki prior to 1984 property of a London gentleman.
Condition: Very fine. Minor wear consistent with age.
In stock
| Weight | 4.3 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | L 3.2 x W 1.6 cm |
| Culture | |
| Glass | |
| Region |
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