Mason’s Patent 1858 With Cobalt Striations

Provenance: Darrell Plank Collection

Many of us might associate color swirls with a glass of water. As a child, we might have borrowed mothers’ food colors and conducted our own chemistry experiments by putting drops of color in a clear glass of hot or cold water and marveled at the beautiful swirls. We could have played with glass marbles with swirls of color. The eye appeal of swirls even reached out to our universe as we looked at far-off images of colliding galaxies, gasses, and stars taken by our Hubbell Space Telescope.

We have a number of early American glass pieces in our museum with glass swirls or striations as we call them as collectors. This is when the natural or intended color of the piece has an alien streaking of color within the form usually appearing as swirls. This condition can be extremely pleasing and is highly desirable with glass collectors though it may have been originally unintended by the person blowing the glass.

This specific museum example is a midget pint Mason’s Patent Nov 30th 1858 jar in aquamarine. The striations are dark cobalt blue. The jar is extremely rare. It was made in Muncie, Indiana at Ball Glass Mfg Company.

See a GIV-7 Masonic Arch Eagle historical flask and a Concentric Rings Target Ball and a Mason’s GCCo Patent 1858 Jar with striations as examples from other museum galleries.

See other Mason jars including Mason Jar history in the FOHBC Virtual Museum Jar Gallery. 

• Mason’s CFJCo Improved – Clyde, N.Y. 
• Mason’s GCCo Patent 1858 Jar 
• Mason’s Improved Jar 
• Mason’s Improved Jar – Australian 
• Mason’s Patent Crowleytown Jar 
• Mason’s Patent Nov. 30th 1858 
• Mason’s Patent 1858 CFJCo Midget Jar 
• Mason’s Patent 1858 Straight Sided 
• Mason’s Patent 1858 Jar in Cobalt Blue
Mason’s Patent 1858 Tudor Rose Pickle Pusher

Primary Image: Mason’s Patent Nov 30th 1858 midget pint imaged on location by the FOHBC Virtual Museum midwest studio led by Alan DeMaison.

Secondary images: Three examples of glass striation. FOHBC Virtual Museum.

Support: Reference to Red Book #11, the Collector’s Guide to Old Fruit Jars by Douglas M. Leybourne, Jr.

Support: Reference to Fruit Jar Annual 2020 – The Guide to Collecting Fruit Jars by Jerome J. McCann

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