Apsley Pellatt
Apsley Pellatt was an English glassware manufacturer and politician. He was the son of glassware maker Apsley Pellatt and Mary Pellatt. Apsley Pellatt’s work is of tremendous skill and artistry. Sulphides, also known as “glass incrustations,” were a revolutionary development in glassmaking and Apsley Pellatt was at the forefront of its creation. In 1819, he took out a patent for this process of encasing a medallion in glass, which he called crystallo ceramie, later called Cameo Incrustation and Sulphides. In 1821, Apsley wrote a book about this process, Memoir on the Origin, Progress and Improvement of Glass Manufactures. In 1849, Glass Incrustations was expanded and revised under the title Curiosities of Glass-Making by him.
19th Century English Other Antique Apsley Pellatt
Cut Glass
19th Century French Other Antique Apsley Pellatt
Bronze, Crystal
Early 20th Century American Other Apsley Pellatt
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20th Century North American Other Apsley Pellatt
Cut Glass
Late 19th Century North American Other Antique Apsley Pellatt
Cut Glass
Early 20th Century North American Other Apsley Pellatt
Cut Glass
Early 20th Century American Other Apsley Pellatt
Cut Glass
Early 20th Century American Other Apsley Pellatt
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19th Century French Art Nouveau Antique Apsley Pellatt
Crystal
Early 20th Century North American Other Apsley Pellatt
Cut Glass
19th Century English Neoclassical Antique Apsley Pellatt
Silver
Early 20th Century American Other Apsley Pellatt
Cut Glass
Late 18th Century American Other Antique Apsley Pellatt
Glass