編號 82811233

無法使用
古埃及,托勒密 玻璃 千花碎片
競投已結束
5 週前

古埃及,托勒密 玻璃 千花碎片

A fine Ancient Egyptian glass fragment from the Ptolemaic period, possibly from an inlay or part of a vessel. The opaque glass features a dark green background containing yellow flower-like patterns with a black cross in the centre. To the reverse, there are layers of red, black yellow and cream gradients. Some deterioration to the surface consistent with age. The creation of millefiori patterns in glass was a time-consuming technique that took skill and patience. Thin canes of different colours were heated together in a certain order, producing the flower patterns, hence the name millefiori meaning thousand flowers. It was then fuse into one larger cane and stretched to reduce the size of the imagery and left to cool. The cane was then sliced into small discs and formed into beads or placed across a hot glassware vessel. The vessel would be blown for a second time to merge the pieces of glass and then left to cool in the desired shape. This process was originally discovered by the Egyptians when producing Millefiori glass and then later developed by the Greeks and Romans. Measurement: L 2.2 cm x W 1.8cm Provenance: Ex Gallery Mikazuki prior to 1984 property of a London gentleman.

編號 82811233

無法使用
古埃及,托勒密 玻璃 千花碎片

古埃及,托勒密 玻璃 千花碎片

A fine Ancient Egyptian glass fragment from the Ptolemaic period, possibly from an inlay or part of a vessel. The opaque glass features a dark green background containing yellow flower-like patterns with a black cross in the centre. To the reverse, there are layers of red, black yellow and cream gradients. Some deterioration to the surface consistent with age.

The creation of millefiori patterns in glass was a time-consuming technique that took skill and patience. Thin canes of different colours were heated together in a certain order, producing the flower patterns, hence the name millefiori meaning thousand flowers. It was then fuse into one larger cane and stretched to reduce the size of the imagery and left to cool. The cane was then sliced into small discs and formed into beads or placed across a hot glassware vessel. The vessel would be blown for a second time to merge the pieces of glass and then left to cool in the desired shape. This process was originally discovered by the Egyptians when producing Millefiori glass and then later developed by the Greeks and Romans.

Measurement: L 2.2 cm x W 1.8cm

Provenance: Ex Gallery Mikazuki prior to 1984 property of a London gentleman.

設置搜索提醒
設置搜索提醒,以便在有新匹配可用時收到通知。

該物品在

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

如何在Catawiki上購買

了解更多有關買家保護

      1. 發現獨特物品

      瀏覽專家挑選的數千件獨特物品。查看每件獨特物品的照片、詳情和估價。 

      2. 出價最高

      找到您喜歡的物品並作出最高的出價。您可以跟隨拍賣進行到底,也可以讓我們的系統為您出價。您所要做的就是為您要支付的最高金額設置出價。 

      3. 作出安全可靠的付款

      為您的獨特物品付款,我們將在您的物品安全無恙抵達前,確保您的付款安全。我們使用受信任的支付系統來處理所有交易。 

有類近的物品可以出售?

無論您是網上拍賣的新手還是專業銷售人員,我們都可以幫助您為您的獨特物品賺取更多收益。

出售您的物品