Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests > Glass Animals & Figurines

Does anyone know the maker of these glass cocktail sticks?

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Simone:
They were my grandparents, and I found them in a box with some other things like ivory :o dice!

Some have little faces, some are birds, there was a broken poodle (which I didn't photograph). Obviously they're much smaller than they are on the pictures.  :)

Picture 1
Picture 2
Picture 3
Picture 4
Picture 5
Picture 6

Bernard C:
Simone — I looked them up in Reynolds, fig.281, but those shown do not have the little knop below the figure, so yours are almost certainly not Walsh.    You may find the Walsh dating useful.   From their location in factory pattern book "A", just a few patterns before the first of the Pompeian range, the Walsh versions must have been launched 1929–30.

Although almost impossible to attribute with any confidence, they are keenly collected.   Sets like yours are much more desirable than singles, even if one or two are damaged.

Bernard C.  8)

Ivo:
The knoped stem is to stop them from falling through the holder which has a metal lid with holes.
Made in large quantities in Lauscha, and in neighbouring Bohemia in the 1930s and 40s, and allegedly in Italy as well. My mother, who married in 1950, said that these were the wedding gift of choice between 1945 and 1950 because there simply was nothing, nothing else in the shops.

It is quite impossible to tell them apart. I have a set which was made by Bimini in a glass holder and can confirm those are more elaborate. I also have a set like yours with holder - the sticks have all little chickens on them, the holder a cold enamel image of a cockerel - and several loose ones which may constitute a set - or not.

Simone:
Thank you Bernard and Ivo.

There's 5 which are a bit damaged, a cockerel and the poodle missing their heads, but the ones on the photos are all in perfect condition, which is a miracle, considering the fact they've shared an unlined, art deco, metal box with metal cocktail sticks and an old paperweight stand.

I don't have a holder, but I'd agree that for such small things, they are elaborate, with the little sailor having the blue ribbon cross over behind his cap, although the poodle was very intricate, I've no idea how they could have made such little things to be commercially viable.

Ivo, I thought the knoped stem was to stop things like olives or cheese sliding too far down the stick and hiding the faces. :D

heartofglass:
I've got some of these, not a full set, but mine have fruit decorations-pear,strawberry,orange,etc. Got them with an original holder which was a pierced red cardboard semi-circle on a flat base- very Deco looking.
I suppose they are for holding garnishes like olives, fruit slices, etc, in place in a cocktail glass.
They are cute,delicate little things, & it's amazing they've survived down the years!
There were many similar items made as beads- I have beads in the same style shaped like fruit, animals, figurines,etc.
I always thought they were Czechoslovakian, but as to what maker, I never knew- this thread is proving very interesting!
 :)

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