
Le Verrier Style: Art Deco Date: 1930 Material: Art metal, dark green patina. Artist/ Maker: Max Le Verrier Signature/ Marks: M. Art Deco squirrel bookends by Max Le Verrier Art metal, dark green patina. The colors may have different as the difference display, please understand. Art Deco squirrel bookends, largest size. Please make sure you do not mind before you bid.

SQUIRREL BOOKENDS MANUAL
Please allow 1-3cm error due to manual measurement. It has a beautiful appearance, solves the problem of storage and makes the desktop clean and tidy.

With scratch-resistant edge design, after many times of grinding, the corners are smooth and will not scratch the child39 s skin.
SQUIRREL BOOKENDS PROFESSIONAL
Handwork: This set of bookends is meticulously carved by professional technicians from modeling to painting. Divided into categories, each grid can be independently to prevent skewing and not tilting on one side. A set of 2 small squirrel decoration bookends, very suitable for supplementing fantasy theme decoration, can be used to display books, magazines, documents and DVDs. Dark green spelter with green Verde Alpi Marble base. They are in near perfect condition with only minor traces of use on the patina. Superbly stylized Art Deco sculptures that always draw your attention. With a telescopic design, you can adjust the size according to the number of books. Gorgeous pair of Original antique Art Deco bookends model: 'Squirrel by Max le Verrier 1930.

Made of metal, it is thick and stable, and it is not easy to push it down. Pattern: Penguin, Squirrel, Shiba Inu, Kittens, CuteĬatFeatures: Retractable, Large Storage Space, Thick and These include The Porpoise, Rearing Horse bookends and the Angelfish.Dear customer: If the product has different styles, colors or models, please Email us after placing the order.ĭescription: Telescopic Bookshelf Simple Table Large Book Stand Creative Students Book FolderItem Specifics: The few New Martinsville pieces listed here that do not fluoresce yellow under UV light were probably produced in the late 1940s or early 1950s by Viking from the original NM molds. They are listed here as New Martinsville, but were produced until the early 1950s by Viking. These included the Seal, Elephant, Wolfhound and Porpoise. Loot Crate is a recurring monthly subscription, meaning that you will receive and be charged for crates every billing cycle unless you cancel your. In 1944, at the time of the name change, several pieces that appeared in Viking’s first catalog had already been in production several years earlier under the New Martinsville name. The new Viking company retained all of New Martinsville’s molds and continued production through the 1950s. There is a lot of confusion among collectors regarding whether these figurines are Viking or New Martinsville. In 1944 the company name was changed to The Viking Glass Company. These little squirrels are munching away on a little acorn.
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In December 1941, they began advertising their new Swedish style glass – The Viking Line”, with the full intention of later changing their name. View this item and discover similar for sale at 1stDibs - Just like mother nature intended. In 1941, NM completely revamped, remodeled and restyled the company in preparation for a completely different kind of glass production. Ĭlick on a photo below to view more detail about the item. The Horse (Head Up), Eagle, and the Nautilus Shell Vase molds were also owned by Wiel Freeman. Designs for the Tigers, received at the NM mold shop in 1940 from Wiel Freeman, may have been made solely for the giftware trade as they do not appear in any New Martinsville catalogs or price lists. Major, high-end giftware distributors such as Wiel Freeman, Ebeling & Reuss, and Marks and Rosenfeld, would submit their own mold designs to NM for production. Many of New Martinsville’s most collectible glass animals from 1938 to 1944 are featured here.Īctivity from “New Martinsville’s Private Mold Customers” during the late 1930s to the mid 1940s was an important part of NM business. (Heisey animals were used in the play.) Suddenly, everyone was collecting glass animals! Viking Glass continued the line of animal figurines through 1950s, and reissued older molds right up to the time they closed in 1986. Around that time, Tennessee Williams wrote his first successful play, “The Glass Menagerie, ”which won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award.

In 1944 Viking became the new name of New Martinsville Glass. 1941 for “New decorative pieces in our heavy lusterous “Viking Crystal.” The ad also introduced the name Viking which reflected the “Swedish” style handmade quality glassware. From 1938 to1944 New Martinsville began producing solid glass animal figurines and bookends. Opened 1901 in New Martinsville, West Virginia“ with a 12 pot furnace and a 4 ton tank ” to manufacture tableware and glass novelties.
