freshening and rearranging mode. This weekend, I scrubbed up my
collection of old glass bottles. Since there was some chat about
bottles over at Subby's blog, I thought I'd snap some pics to share,
while they're nice and shiny.
My collection started with a few vintage bottles when I was a girl.
Some of my favorties are the ones found by my sons in the woody
area behind the manor that was once an old trash burning dump.
I'm really nutty about all kinds of glass. I love the magical play of
light, and the delightful bubbles and imperfections in vintage glass.
I imagine myself traveling back in time and buying a glass factory
like Lucinda Laplastrier in Peter Carey's Oscar and Lucinda.
also known as Dutch tears. It's a glass curiosity created by dripping
hot molten glass into cold water. The glass cools to a tadpole shaped
droplet with a long, thin tail. If the tail is broken it explodes into a
million tiny particles. I'd love to have one. They're so pretty, tough,
I would be tempted never to burst it. Apparently, Rupert's Drops
have been around for quite some time. Here's an excerpt from Ballad
of Gresham College, 1663.
And that which makes their Fame ring louder,
With much adoe they shew'd the King
To make glasse Buttons turn to powder,
If off the[m] their tayles you doe but wring.
How this was donne by soe small Force
Did cost the Colledg a Month's discourse.
Once in a while, WT brings one back from his travels, like this pretty
little gold one from Portobello Road in London. I've always got my
eyes peeled for them in flea markets and antique stores.
Here's a video montage from the movie Oscar and Lucinda, set to
music by The Strokes which shows the breaking of a Rupert's Drop.
What a fun post! I found an old beer jug buried in my parents garden in England. The house was built in the 1700s so who knows how old it is. I love old bottles and love the one from Portabello Rd.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pictures! I love old bottles as well. And new ones too. We have found a few beauties around our farm -- old bitters bottles mainly.
ReplyDeleteWillow, when my glass blower friends turn their furnace on this fall, I'll see if they can make you one.
ReplyDeletewillow this is music to my eyes - i love glass, especially old glass, formed or flat. i love the way light works in and around it and through it - i love the colours - the flaws - the bubbles of air - the smooth 'cross the palm, cold against the cheek feel of glass . . . . this post is a treasure for me!!! thankyou. steven
ReplyDeleteI love old and/or coloured glass. If I'm buying new I prefer to buy recycled glass as it's often got a better character. I particularly like the play of light around tears.
ReplyDeleteBack in the old days when I was working in a museum I came across a box full of exquisite miniature glass amphorae. They were Phoenician in origin, wonderfully patterned with bands of opaque and coloured glasses.
beautiful pics willow, nicely framed. love the one by the round window. sweet that he brings you bottles...i did that with T when i used travel a bit, only it was vases...
ReplyDeleteLovely photos and bottles, Willow. I have a small collection too; I'll share it soon.
ReplyDeleteLove the bottles! I think they're such a lovely way to decorate.
ReplyDeleteI heard about Prince Rupert's Drops in one of my Dick Francis mysterys - the hero was a glass maker & the concept behind the drops was key to getting the bad guys. Really cool!
wonderful images... the primaries always work! -Jayne
ReplyDeletePlease come down and give my bottles some TLC! :) I want your deep window sills to display them on!
ReplyDeleteWe used to find those old insulators that they used on the power lines on the old railroad tracks, I don't know if you have ever seen them, but they were very unique looking.
ReplyDeleteI didn't even know they'd made a movie of Oscar and Lucinda, it's one of my favourite books and Blanchet and Fiennes are two of my favourite actors!
ReplyDeleteYour bottles are lovely, especially like the gold one.
Love bottles and love the blues and browns together.
ReplyDeleteWillow..that is a beautiful collection! The pictures really show them off!
ReplyDeleteYour pretty bottles remind me of sea glass - one of my most favorite things. If I lived any where near the ocean I'm afraid I'd spend way too much time looking for it, and for sea shells, and just listening to water wash up on the shore.
ReplyDeleteMy sister-in-law took me bottle digging in Savannah,Georgia, USA. It was a well picked over area so we dug underneath tree roots for bottles. We found several and the glass, after many years underground, had a purple opalescent shine to it. I have also found antique bottles in the walls of my house, flasks left by 19th century workers, and smaller antique bottles left by rodents.
ReplyDeleteOtin, yes, I have some of those old insulators, too. They're cool, aren't they?
ReplyDeleteLori, in the walls of your house?! What a fun treasure! I'd like to see them. You should post on them sometime.
ReplyDeleteOh, Ellen, really?! I'd love one!! Thank you so much!! :D
ReplyDeleteOh Willow! They are so lovely!
ReplyDeleteGlad you collect glass too Wllow. Glass is so wond'rous and pretty, pre fire I had some Roman glass from the 2nd. century we had bought in Cologne when we were there for six months, also Chinese perfume bottles as well as antique crystal. Now I have a collecton from our superb glass-blowers right here in Adelaine, mainly in deep blue and pink to match the Persian rugs in the Music room.
ReplyDeleteIt seems we all have a love of glass. On our land here in Ireland, we have found many glass bottles and have cleaned them as best we can. Various ointment bottles are for me the most fascinating. I blogged on them once. Lovely post and I must see that film, it looks just 'me'.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely fascinating Willow!
ReplyDeleteThey say, "You learn something new every day," well, I have certainly gotten my nugget of knowledge for today!
I love this post Willow. The pics are fantastic, and so is your collection. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful colors, and scrumptious pictures. We had some old bottles in a window at home (they are still there, though I'm not). I loved watching the sunlight play with them...Thanks for the memory, too.
ReplyDeleteThe bottles are so beautiful! I love all of your collections... I want to hang up these pictures on my wall and pretend they are mine! lol
ReplyDeleteWonderful collection of bottles.
ReplyDeleteVery cool pics. I have my own collection of old bottles, dug from an old dump behind my friend's cabin in the mountains. The old house had a postmistress that was snowed in during the winter. Only access by boat. She was alone all those snowy months. We found many liquor bottles. :-)
ReplyDeleteAnd she "papered" part of the kitchen with flowers cut from magazines. Wishful thinking?
Ciao Willow! Belle bottiglie!!!
ReplyDeleteReally nice bottles, the colours, the shape, the "taste" of old.
Ciao have a nice week!
just precious, this value of which you bring...at one point, I held my own, but 'cleaned house' ridding of all 'unnecessay'...beautiful they are, most definately. May mine have had found a home of such graciousness as your own.
ReplyDeleteLovely old glass willow - especially with the light shining through it. I have one or two horse medicine bottles which were found on the farm when we were doing some alterations but the coloured glass looks really beautiful.
ReplyDeleteThe bottles are, of course, beautiful but what makes the post is the stunning photographs. I have always had a greater fondness for content rather than container, but you might be changing my mind.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pictures of your collection. I especially like the one before the round window.
ReplyDeletereally lovely photos of your bottles
ReplyDeleteAh! Fabulous post. I love the images! Steven (as well as I) will no doubt find many glass creatures in the reflections.
ReplyDeleteI, too, love glass of all kinds. Did you know that according to chemists, glass "should" always be a liquid, at every temperature. It acts like a liquid even when it's a solid. Glass is pure mystery, it is.
I've got glass blower friends - man - that's an art that takes a lot of nerve. I'm thinking too of Ellen and her glass etching and sculpture. She is kind of a badass, after all.
I agree with you about Angelina Jolie. She creeps me out. Do you think she's an alien?
Love the bottles Willow but your photographing of them is just stunning; so creative and artful!!
ReplyDeleteI've seen a Prince Rupert's drop/tear that a friend of mine had; she was also a bottle collector. I love all the imperfections in the old glass.
now I have to see that movie!
ReplyDeleteI am forever finding broken glass in my garden. I've never found anything in one piece though.
your collection is so pretty.
I had no idea about the Rupert drops... it's been too long since I saw that movie. Your collection is stunning.
ReplyDeleteReya, yes, I think Jolie is some kind of insect alien. She's freaky.
ReplyDeleteLovely post! I love old bottles, too & have a small collection, but not much space for display, so most stay in boxes for "now."
ReplyDeleteI enjoy looking at bottles and glass objects in flea markets and antique shops, but must resist the desire to own them.
Did you see this movie? It looks like a good one.
Hillary, I like this movie so much I own a copy!
ReplyDeletebeautiful beautiful photos Willow :)
ReplyDeleteI have a nice little collection of old glass and old glass bottles too; oddly most of mine are that wonderful cobalt blue color
ReplyDeleteBeautiful post Willow.
ReplyDeletebeautiful collection - beautiful - i'm such a lover of colored glass too - bottles and sea glass - isn't it wonderful how such "little" things can bring so much joy and happiness to our lives! thanks for sharing yours!
ReplyDeleteSO BEAUTIFUL!!! My husband and I collect bottles. I will take some and post for you. Some of the old heroine bottles still have tablets in them. Crazy.
ReplyDeleteDaryl, the cobalts are my favorite. Hang on to them. They are harder to find than the brown and clear bottles.
ReplyDeleteIt is always interesting to see what others are drawn to and collect. I am more attracted to earthy, textured nature based stuff-- but from your images I can see why you love the old bottles.
ReplyDeleteI will keep my eyes peeled .but such beauty get rarer........Ive got an old German Glass (honey-Pot?) I brought back from Poland years ago.i keep my coffee in these days.
ReplyDeleteLoved the movie!!! When they were digging for the drain field they dug up an old blue ink bottle and an old 'Dr.Bakers Pain Relief' bottle.
ReplyDeleteDr. Baker was a 'cancer doctor' in our town at the turn of the century, I can only imagine what this brew was...my Great Grandmother died under his care...of cancer.
I love the light shining through old bottles in a window. Great colors, Willow! That cobalt blue is a big fave for me.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful old bottles willow woven with the sands of time but no bottle is as beautiful as the full bottle glowing here in front of me ;)
ReplyDeleteGosh, you have a great collection here. We have some very old bottles in the cellars and I really should dust them down one day.
ReplyDeleteCJ xx
Glass makes my heart dance with joy and sing with praise. Your photos of your freshly spiffed collection make me happy!
ReplyDeleteI'm curious about the picture in the sidebar. Is it peeling madrona bark??? Mysterioius and compelling, it also makes me happy!
Hi Robin, the side bar pic is shards of clay pots. I'm happy to hear it makes you happy!
ReplyDeleteGreat images, Willow!
ReplyDeleteLoved that movie..have an old VCR, can still play it!
ReplyDelete..what magic glass is!! Blue/green my fav..I have a chunk of sea glass that I've leaned against a leaf in a palm in my living room..just so it can catch the light.
That gold bottle from London is so special!
So pretty!
ReplyDeletei've a friend who has about 100 of those funny little glass balls...she bought them mostly in Southern Indiana..they're neat; I bought one...
ReplyDeleteand i love to see the original glass windows in very old buildings. Fun video, looks like a movie the Misses and I would enjoy.
oh, and picking up smoothed glass from the sea and lake shore is a great find too!
You are always so interesting.
ReplyDeleteHello Willow, you have an exquisite
ReplyDeletebottle collection. The colors take
on a magical hue, especially when
the bottles are placed near a
window. I have a tiny collection of
green bottles & one cherised
green bud vase.
Oscar & Lucinda is a wonderful and
unique movie - Loved!
Great news - The Earrings of Madame
de - is available on DVD- I read
about the movie in the Times almost
a year ago. Must try to get this
movie!
How neat - the glass bottles are great and you have displayed them wonderfully.
ReplyDeleteAmazing bottle shots!!!
ReplyDeleteHello Willow,
ReplyDeleteI love the matt blue in the very first pic! My mother told me that when they moved into our family house, father had to dispose of over 100 bottles that had been left by the previous occupier - and all beer bottles!!
I loved this post a lot. It totally inspired me to pull out of the cabinets some decanters I had collected some years ago. Thanks for the inspiration!
ReplyDeletewillow,
ReplyDeletewhen i was little the first thing i started to collect was old bottles.
just like the ones in your pic.
my mother was an antique dealer and designer, i was dragged to all the antique shows, bottles were cheap enough for me to collect.
i have no idea where they are now, but i would love to have them on a window sill in my house.
xx