Found 4,441 items made of . Refine Search
Found 4,441 items made of . Refine Search
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Clear; post-mold (1850s-1890s); no pontil scar so post-1865; tall, moderately slender bodied straight neck spirits cylinders (1870s-1919); residue on inside; multiple abrasions on inner surface.
Fragment (broken at neck); clear with greenish hue; post-mold bottle (late 1850s-1890s); no pontil scar so post-1865; tall, moderately slender bulged neck spirits; based on being almost colourless, it would have been produced after 1885-1890; residue on inside; oily sheen.
Green; offset seams (in early 1900s-1920s); Non-Owens machine due to lack of suction scar (post-1905); crown cap (on machine made started 1910-1912); narrow mouth (always after 1905 but usually post-1910); crown top soda; chip on lip.
Fragment (broken at mouth), brown; early blow-and-blow machine due having all the features of machine-made bottles but also having a post-mold base (1910s-1920s); mold seams probably go up to lip but mouth is broken.
Clear/aqua; (clear uncommon prior to 1870s but quite common in mid to late 1910s); machine made due to mold seams and other seams - has all features except suction scar (post-1905); the aqua tint to it indicates it is from or prior to 1920s, so combined with other indicators, it is from 1905-1920s; has residue on it.
Brown beer bottle; probably 1920s to 1940s due to being an export style, non-Owens machine-made bottle with a narrow neck and a crown finish.
Brown; tall, moderately slender bodied straight necked early "patent" style (mid-19th century); probably around 1890s because the style had been around for a while by then, it has a post-mold base (1850s-1890s), and crown finish (mid-1890s - 1915 for mouth blown.)
Green; probably mid-1890s - 1910 due to being a post-mold bottle (1880s-1910), the tooled crown cap finish (1890-1915), champagne style beer bottle (1870s-1890s for specific type), olive green (prior to 1910); residue on inside.
brown; blow-and-blow machine because it has all the features of machine-made bottles but also has a post-mold base (1910s-1920s); non-Owens machine because of lack of suction scar; crown finish (1910-1912 to present); textured base, but not stippling.
Green; "C" "16" embossed on heel; early blow-and-blow machine because it has all the feautures of machine-made bottles but also has post-mold base (1910s-1920s); "C" could be Chattonooga Bottle Glass Mfg Co (used logo from 1913-1914); quite a few bubbles (from 1905-1910 through to 1920s); crown finish (1910-1912 to present.)