Customer service during the national holiday may 8

 

Due to the national holiday on Wednesday, May 8, 2024, Moser customer service will be available for you again from Thursday, May 9, 2024. We will try to process all incoming orders and inquiries as soon as possible. Thank you for your understanding.

 

Calla vase, 25 cm

Timeless Elegance

Undo selection of parameters

2,548.00 $

Delivery options
Product ID:
12133
Catalog No.:
02777

The beauty of the flowers unites with lead-free Czech crystal to create the delicate Calla vase. Its decoration consists of two different floral motifs: a flag and a lily. They become an inseparable couple, no matter if the cut crystal is underlaid with reseda, green or amethyst. The symbolism of two flowers in their shared world of crystal glass makes this vase a timeless wedding gift with a  value that lasts for centuries.

  •  
  • Size 25,0 cm
  • Height 250 mm
  • Manufactured since 1890-1905
  • Maximum diameter 170 mm
  • Collections Art Nouveau
  • Design and production

    A crystal vase with the grace of the old times

    Recall the grace and elegance of the turn of the 19th and 20th century. Playful art nouveau and its captivating ornaments of cut crystal will bring an aura of lace gloves and manly top hats into your home. Hand-cut and engraved glass receives the same care from the Moser glassmakers as it did more than a century ago when this vase first shownrevealed its beauty to the world.

    •  Hand-blown from environmentally friendly lead-free crystal
    •   Hand cut and polished to a high gloss
    • Sophisticated artistic engraving
    •  Made using the glass underlay technique

  • Designer

    Moser

    Moser’s art nouveau vases with floral motifs are a beautiful example of the skills of the Carlsbad glassmakers, cutters and engravers. They’ve been pushing the boundaries of perfection ever since the turn of the 19th and 20th century, when art nouveau breathed fresh life into all forms of art. The Moser vases, first called “Moderne Plastik” and later “Eckentiefgravur”, were admired at the World Exhibition in Paris in 1900, as well as at the exhibitions of London, Turin and St. Louis. The hand-cut, hand-engraved glass has remained popular till the present day.


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