A Thing for Glass ♥

I love glass. I love it for the same reason birds love it, it’s shiny.  Cleaning the glass around my house, including my windows, mirrors, and the glass on pictures is one of my chief (and some would think, strangest) decorating tips for the holidays.  Glass makes the perfect palette for candlelight and twinkle lights to shimmer and shine which does a lot to make magic in any room.  Like the trail Tinkerbelle leaves as she flies by. 

Receiving this dish in my early 20’s was probably the thing that alerted me to the possibilities with glass and started the obsession.  It was a gift from my Aunt Maroline and Uncle Bob when I got married.  When I first saw it, I didn’t know what it was or what I would DO with it; there were no bananas in it when I unwrapped it, so I wasn’t sure what its purpose was.  I love things with a purpose, so when my aunt told me it was to hold bananas, I jumped for joy.  It had a reason to exist!  I could have it!  The pure charm and whimsy of the thing took hold of my heart, and this banana dish has been on every kitchen table, island, or counter in every kitchen of my life.  It is a mainstay.  I would be bereft without it.  We are never without bananas in our house. 

Inspiration is funny.  You never know when it will hit or what form it will take.  One summer afternoon, many years ago, we were sitting at the picnic table in the backyard belonging to a French man we know here on the island.  He spread a white table cloth over the wood table, brought out beautiful cheeses on a board, and served us cold white wine in short, straight-sided thin glasses like these, while French cafe music drifted out the open French doors to his house.

 I thought, oo, la, oui!  How continental!  How adorably foreign!  How Charles Trenet!  I must have this!

And so it began, the glass collection that will never end.  Because

 

 

 

 

it was becoming obvious that to lead an original romantic life, on the model of the early Zelda Fitzgerald, where dreamy French music and entertaining would take place, I was going to need to gather the ingredients (props); these glasses looked like a good place to start.

We’ve collected ours mostly one at a time.  We’ll see one on a shelf in an antique store, it will cost a dollar, and we will jump on it like it’s a trophy.  Our eyes narrow and shift around the store, to see, does anyone else notice this wonderful thing is only a dollar? And they don’t, so we grab it and run.  What is a dollar these days? A candy bar is a dollar.

Because we find them one at a time, our collection of these little glasses is very mix and match.  We’ve found them in pink and green depression glass, etched with fruit and flowers, swirled, and hand-painted.

We have found them etched with the Lord’s Prayer.

We have found ones that we can’t believe have survived so long!

Some of them could definitely tell a story. We found this one from the first Queen Elizabeth in the little antique store on board the QEII.  It was not a dollar.  But it had our name written all over it. The Finding-Nemo seagull word formed on the lips, “mine” it said, irresistibly, as in take me I’m yours.

Over time, we realized that others, with slightly different shapes, make wonderful water glasses.  I know some of you understand this love of pretty glasses, because a couple of weeks ago we put three sets of these little glasses, colored and etched, in the Vintage section of our website, and they were snapped right up!  Sets are really hard to find but Joe and I got them out shopping as we were crossing the country!  So happy you (whoever you are) got them!  I will keep looking, when I’m out and about, for more.

We have found them in all colors . . . and have broadened our definition of “what is acceptable” to include different shapes.  We had to, there was no choice; do you look at these yellow jewels and say, oh dear, no, the ridges just won’t do? No, you do not.  You don’t even think it.

Setting the table can be like putting together a puzzle, a little of this a little of that.  But, for better or worse, however it turns out will be very unlike anyone else’s, because, as you know, you can’t walk into a store and just get this stuff any time, it takes a long time to gather this, a person has to be choosy and get just what she loves. 

Glass obsession knows no end.  It graduates from wine glasses, and gets its wings with serving bowls, candle sticks, and cake plates.  It was probably thirty years of antiquing before I found this at a price I was willing to pay for it.  I’m just not paying $200 for a cake stand, but I will pay $56.  Yes, I will.  Here it is, home at last!  Holding my mom’s famous Coconut Circus Cake with pink sugar frosting. 

Pitchers and ice bowls call my name too.

Early morning light comes in through the windows and falls across the dining table, and this is what we get, free of charge.

Glass star bobeche and colored-glass vintage sugars and creamers are perfect for the holidays.

And here is my newest find.  Something I almost never come across, do you recognize it?  Yes!  It’s a really beautiful cut-glass Banana Dish, about as perfect as it can be.  But, you are saying, “She already has a banana dish . . . this isn’t fair!”

And I am saying, “I didn’t get it for me.  I got it for you.” 

Yes, I did; this little jewel is going to one of you, and all you have to do to be entered for the random drawing is leave a comment and tell me (and everyone!) your favorite housekeeping tip.  Or, like last time, you can just say hello! Or maybe a Jell-O recipe would be good. 🙂

In a couple of days, after everyone is all signed up, we’ll draw a name.  More fun in this giant mutual admiration society of ours!  Willard starts going out this morning…today and tomorrow.  I’m off to work on my book!  Talk to you later!  Happy day to all! 

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1,791 Responses to A Thing for Glass ♥

  1. Jann Tate says:

    That is so awesome a crystal banana holder ! Well my most favorite household tip to share, when the girls were little and ( I was a single mom had 3 very close in age)when it came time to clean house we would start in the living room nd everything that didn’t belong ther got put in the laundry basket and by the time we got done with the house all we had left was to put up everything in the laundry basket! It’s funny now when we visit their homes they still do that! Lol I love it! Enjoy my favorite ladies!

  2. Jamie Willow says:

    Oh how lovely to see all of that glittering glass. I have a similar love of all things shiney 🙂 I inherited some really amazing glass and just love pulling it out when I entertain.

    As for a household tip…clean as you go. That’s all I’ve got 🙂 I’m still learning.

  3. Pamela Jewett says:

    Hi Susan,

    I have enjoyed following your “star” for years and even have a few of your snail mail Willards. I love your blog and the great photos you post. Had I not seen the banana dish you posted I would have not had a clue what it was. How handy though! I notice that you store your glasses rim down on a shelf. I was brought up to set them upright. Whats the scoop with that? Tradition? Depend on which part of the country you grew up in? Just curious, I know it doesn’t really matter.
    My kitchen hint is if you are out of paper muffin cup liners, cut squares of foil to fit in each muffin tin hole. They work well and peel off quickly.
    Until next time!
    Pam

    • sbranch says:

      I think so, also the day and the whim, because some of mine are up and some are down! 🙂 Thanks for the cooking tip!

  4. Beth Foraker says:

    Hello! Here is my best “kitchen tip” — although it’s really more “household”, I know you won’t hold it against me. Here goes: if you ever have ants invading your kitchen, just put a blop of baby powder where they are entering and they won’t return (and your house smells good as well!). Yep, ants don’t do well with baby powder at all. 🙂 So there you have it, a sure fire, “green” way to get rid of some pesky visitors any time. ~Beth
    PS Love your glass collection! I collect “sea glass”…not much benefit to it other than beauty but I love it.

    • sbranch says:

      I love sea glass too! Just knowing the sea made it is good enough for me! I’ve also used baking powder to stop ants, and as long as there’s been just one entry spot, that has worked too!

  5. June W. says:

    My mother had some small wine glasses with grapes on them. They look much like the small ones in one of your pictures. One of my daughters has them now and I’m sure she treasures them. They have to be at least 65-70 years old.

  6. Cynthia Johnson says:

    I, too, love vintage glass and am excited to see your banana dish. Isn’t it fun that dishes have such purposes? I have a pinched sides bowl of English Hobnail by Westmorland that was my mother’s from the ’30s.
    Love your new England posts to compare with my life on the prairie!
    Cynthia Johnson

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