🥛 Glassware Identification & Value
Depression glass and vintage Pyrex are the most-collected 20th-century glass. Value is set by pattern, color and piece — common patterns and clear glass are inexpensive, while scarce colors (cobalt, some pinks and greens) and hard-to-find pieces (lidded, footed, promotional) command a premium. Reproductions exist for popular Depression patterns, so identifying pattern and maker matters. This guide identifies patterns and makers and gives hedged value ranges from sold prices — an educational estimate, not a formal appraisal.
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Value & identification guides
More glassware identification & value guides are being added.
Frequently asked
How do I identify a Depression glass pattern?
Match the molded pattern (florals, geometrics) and color against a pattern guide; note the maker (Hocking, Jeannette, MacBeth-Evans, Federal). Beware reproductions in popular patterns like Cherry Blossom and Royal Lace — repro colors and details often differ.
Which vintage Pyrex is valuable?
Promotional and short-run patterns (e.g. Lucky in Love, Pink Stems) and complete bowl sets in sought-after patterns (Butterprint, Gooseberry, Butterfly Gold) bring the most. Common single bowls in everyday patterns are inexpensive.
Value ranges are indicative educational estimates based on category, era, maker and condition — not a formal appraisal. Ranges reflect sold prices only.