Dear Customers,
We are now in the process of improving and expanding our business,
moving to a new location as well as building a new, more efficient,
website.
We're unable to fulfill your orders until October
1st, 2008. Please come back in the fall!
Jim and Michaela Freeman
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PLATES PLATTERS
Click on images or names below to view product details and larger images.
PLATES - PLATTERS
Plates platters in our collection
are works of art in the tradition of fine crystal working.
Perfect as a serving platter, lovely on a side table, stunning
displayed in a cabinet.
We are proud to bring to the world these wonderful
examples of what can be done with molten glass, worked, stretched,
turned and drawn into stunning gift glass---whether the gift
is for a lover, dear friend or merely yourself. Gaze through
it and wonder how it's done.
Every piece in our collection is made entirely
by hand, by craftsmen who trace their crystal working ancestry
back for centuries, often in the same villages where they
now live and work. We see them working the glass, young and
old in leather aprons or shorts and running shoes, several
generations side by side are reflected in the glare of the
kiln.
Czech crystal, the presentation gift of kings
for more than six centuries will remain in your family as
a valued heirloom. This enduring tradition of craftsmanship
assures you've made the right choice, sets you apart from
the ordinary and shows you know your way around the world
of fine craftsmanship.
All our crystal comes directly from workshops
in the Czech Republic. Shipped to you by air from Prague,
allowing us to sell premium quality crystal at surprisingly
affordable prices.
At the end of 17th and the beginning of the
18th century, the major reputation and world recognition of
Czech glass was achieved. There was strong development within
specialized Czech production, including the decorating of
glass by painting, engraving and cutting. Czech glass of these
times put to shame the previously favorite Venetian glass.
By the end of 18th and beginning of the 19th
centuries, English, Irish and French lead crystal began to
compete with Czech glass. Lead crystal was glass with a high
content of lead and very suitable for cutting, as it was softer,
heavier and attained an extremely high luster.
Czech glassmaking held its dominance through
the early 20th century and until the Nazi invasion of 1938,
when world markets disappeared in the smoke and ruin of World
War Two. Shortly after the end of that war, Czechoslovakia
slid silently behind the Iron Curtain, not to be heard from
again until the Velvet Revolution of 1989 and the subsequent
separation from Slovakia.
In these times of 'yesterday's news,' sixty
years is more than sufficient time for the world to have
forgotten the centuries of Czech domination in the glassmakers
art. Bohemia and Moravia are but clouded memories in a reconfigured
Europe and yet these lands make up the present day Czech
Republic, where the glassmaker's tradition thrives once again.
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