A tall English cut-glass Table Lamp with lattice cutting
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A tall English cut-glass Table Lamp with lattice cutting

2461

A tall English cut-glass Table Lamp with lattice cutting:
with intricate oval-cut lattice pattern on the stem; the canopy with scalloped edge; circular foot with star-cut base and ‘thumb press’ cutting on upper edge.
Probably by Osler & Co. of Birmingham, circa 1910 and restored. Lamp shade not supplied.

Height: 26" - 66.0cm
Width: 6¾" - 17.0cm

cut glass

Often now referred to as 'crystal', the glass was blown and shaped, then passed to a specialist cutter, who would polish and cut patterns to enhance its brilliance.

Edwardian

Of the reign of King Edward VII (1901-1910). Following on from the highly-ornamented Victorian age, the Edwardians' style was simpler, with weighty, classical lines, and decorous floral patterns. It celebrated the new electric era but they still continued to use candles, oil and gas in different parts of the house.

Osler & Co. (F & C)

Founded in Birmingham, England, in 1807, F & C Osler produced some of the most magnificent and imaginative items ever to come from a glass manufacturer. Thomas Osler, his sons, Follett and Clarkson, and after 1831, his nephew Abraham, were known for their exquisitely cut glass, often combined with fine gilded-metal mounts and framework, produced by their own craftsmen. From about 1840, they had established good contacts with the Middle East and had a gallery in Calcutta, India. Osler made an extravagant cut glass fountain for the centre of The Great Exhibition in 1851. They continued making chandeliers of the highest quality until well into the 20th century. In 1924, they took over the well-known lighting manufacturer Faraday Ltd. and went on producing light fittings until the 1970s.

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