Ice bucket - Crystal - Bayel





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Crystal ice bucket by Bayel from France, dating to the late 20th century with manganese-enriched crystal giving a bright green glow under UV light, 11.7 cm high (22.5 cm with handle), 9.5 cm top diameter, 8 cm bottom diameter, 10 cm depth, and 745 g, in excellent condition with minimal signs of wear.
Description from the seller
Manganese-enriched Bayel Ice Bucket
I am selling this beautiful ice bucket.
Shipping at the buyer's expense, very carefully packed with bubble wrap.
Materials: Crystal enriched with manganese, offering a bright green, vivid hue under a 365 nm UV lamp.
Condition: Very good.
Signature: unlabeled but attributed to Bayel
Year: Late 20th century
Dimensions: height 11.7 cm, height with handle 22.5 cm, top diameter 9.5 cm, bottom diameter 8 cm, depth 10 cm, 745 grams.
Features: Pretty little Bayel crystal molded glass ice bucket with a silver handle.
History: Bayel, a champagne village located in the east of the Aube department, at the crossroads of Lorraine and Bourgogne, has been working with glass since 1300.
In 1678, Jean-Baptiste Mazzolay, a Venetian master glassmaker, established a glassworks there under the aegis of the Clairvaux monks, then owners of the site.
King Louis XIV granted the
Manganese-enriched Bayel Ice Bucket
I am selling this beautiful ice bucket.
Shipping at the buyer's expense, very carefully packed with bubble wrap.
Materials: Crystal enriched with manganese, offering a bright green, vivid hue under a 365 nm UV lamp.
Condition: Very good.
Signature: unlabeled but attributed to Bayel
Year: Late 20th century
Dimensions: height 11.7 cm, height with handle 22.5 cm, top diameter 9.5 cm, bottom diameter 8 cm, depth 10 cm, 745 grams.
Features: Pretty little Bayel crystal molded glass ice bucket with a silver handle.
History: Bayel, a champagne village located in the east of the Aube department, at the crossroads of Lorraine and Bourgogne, has been working with glass since 1300.
In 1678, Jean-Baptiste Mazzolay, a Venetian master glassmaker, established a glassworks there under the aegis of the Clairvaux monks, then owners of the site.
King Louis XIV granted the

