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BLACKLIGHTING
Blacklighting should be used as
an 'indicator,' not as a litmus
test as to whether or not the
glass is from the American
Brilliant Period. Only
long-wave blacklight is
effective and it must be used in
a dark room or in a special
'box' that would eliminate
outside light. We have made a
box in our photography room that
is nothing more than a space
between two shelves that we
lined completely with black
fabric and created a 'flap' at
the front so that we could put
the pieces in. We let the flap
down and then 'peek in the side'
to see how the piece
fluoresces. The fixture that
holds the blacklight bulb was
screwed to the bottom of the top
shelf; the fixture has a switch
on it and a cord that goes to a
nearby electrical outlet. The
fixture is not important but the
bulb is. The bulb we use is a
two-pin fluorescent bulb
18-inches long and an inch in
diameter. It was made by GE and
has the following
identification: F (or P, I
can't read it) 15 T 8 - BLB
blacklight 15 watts. Our tube
is marked USA; we have found
that some GE tubes made overseas
do not fluoresce correctly.
To get a feel for the color you
are looking for, it is best to
take a signed piece or pieces
that we are positive are of
American origin and fluoresce
them. Pieces by Libbey and
Pairpoint would be excellent as
they made their own glass and we
have no documentation that they
purchased foreign blanks as some
companies did. The color we are
looking for is somewhat like a
light, apple green. The green
indicates that there are traces
of manganese in the glass which
characteristic of American-made
glass. Very few, if any,
foreign blanks from Baccarat or
Val Saint Lambert and other
foreign sources had manganese in
them. Once you have the proper
bulb and set-up, and have seen a
few pieces that have the various
shades of apple green, you will
get a feel for what to look
for.
Another problem is that some
pieces are so heavily cut and so
highly polished that all you are
reading is the reflections of
the blacklight itself on the
glass. On such a piece, you
might be able to find a 'thick
spot' at the bottom or very top
where you can get a true
reading. There are other
problems, also. One of the
biggest is that some of our
earliest cutting houses (such as
Egginton and Straus) used
Baccarat blanks and other
foreign blanks. We have pieces
in our collection that do NOT
fluoresce green but are
definitely from these two
companies and are shown in their
catalogs. Another problem is
that some 'modern' glass is now
turning up with manganese and
hence fluoresces the apple green
color. As far as I know, there
is no one source that would tell
you exactly what the different
colors indicate. A difficult
subject and a decent amount of
controversy; it all leads back
to blacklighting as an
indicator, NOT a litmus
test.
We have recently found that a
‘made in Japan’ USH10 Black
Light Blue F15T8BLB Hg (in a
circle), 18-inch, 2-pin
fluorescent, 15 watt bulb
produces the required results.
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