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VINTAGE LALIQUE FEMMES DECANTER WITH SIX FEMMES TUMBLERS IN EXCELLENT CONDITION

$ 937.2

Availability: 60 in stock
  • Color: Clear
  • Production Style: Art Glass
  • Subject/Theme: Women
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Condition: In Excellent Preowned condition. Very light residue at the bottom of the decanter from previous use.
  • Type of Glass: Crystal
  • Object Type: Decanter
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Material: Glass
  • Brand: Lalique
  • Glassmaking Technique: Hand Blown
  • Features: Limited Edition
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Style: Art Deco
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: France
  • Original/Reproduction: Vintage Original

    Description

    LALIQUE FEMMES DECANTER WITH SIX FEMMES TUMBLERS IN EXCELLENT PREOWNED CONDITION
    .
    From https://www.lalique.com/en/world-of-lalique/know-how
    A LONG PROCESS, FROM THE CREATIVE STUDIO TO THE MANUFACTURE. Thanks to a team of passionate designers, Lalique creates each year beautiful pieces inspired by three themes dear to René Lalique : women, flora and fauna. In the creation studio, our designers use traditional techniques such as drawing and modelling but also new technologies thanks to digitalization and 3D printing. Once at the factory, the manufacturing process begins. A single crystal piece can require up to 40 different steps.
    The Lalique factory, which began its production in 1922, was built by the company’s founder, René Lalique, in the village of Wingen-sur-Moder in Alsace, a region of France which has the strongest glassmaking traditions.
    With precise and regular movements, the human hand, that of both artist and craftsman, creates pieces of exceptional quality while preserving the ancestral know-how. Lalique is proud to count among its craftsmen seven who carry the title of Best Craftsmen in France.
    The first few stages of the long process of production are related to the manufacturing of the molds which is a fundamental know-how of the factory.
    Then the glassmakers brave extreme temperatures in the “hot glass” workshops in order to gather, clean, shape and reheat the crystal.
    The melting crystal can reach 1,400°C and is captured and manipulated using a variety of techniques.
    Some large or artistic pieces need to be manufactured with the ‘lost-wax’ technique, a technique used by René Lalique until 1930. Its particularity is the use of single-use molds in plaster instead of cast-iron molds.
    In the “cold glass” workshops, a piece will undergo a succession of manual operations. These represent 2/3 of the time spent on the manufacturing of each object. The importance given to cold glass is characteristic of Lalique. It is the result of the extreme attention given to details, finishing and to the sculpture of each creation.  The pieces are selected not only according to technical criteria (absence of defects) but also according to aesthetic criteria, with full respect of the creative team's intentions.  During the entire process, each item is subject to rigorous checks before it can be signed by hand, a guarantee of its authenticity and quality.
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