The sample book described herein displays the wound glass beads produced during the third quarter of the 19th century by an acclaimed Venetian firm, that of the Giacomuzzi brothers. The book vividly shows what sorts of beads were being marketed by a single firm at this time, and provides much useful information concerning bead sizing systems. Although not marked with the producers name, the folders that accompany the book are of like date and at least one is likely a product of the Giacomuzzis
Visit the image gallery to view and download high resolution color plate images for this volume
Francis: Beads of the World: A Collector\u27s Guide with Price Reference reviewed by Stefany Tomalin...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
During the 19th and 20th centuries, Gablonz in northern Bohemia (now Jablonec nad Nisou in the Czech...
The year 2006 marks the 80th anniversary of the presentation of a Classification and Nomenclature o...
The Levin Catalogue is composed of two similar collections of glass and stone beads assembled by Mos...
One of the earliest detailed descriptions of the Venetian bead industry is contained in an obscure b...
Giovanni Giacomuzzi (1817-1872) was the driving force behind the celebrated 19th-century Venetian be...
This guide provides information relevant to the description and classification of glass beads recove...
Bead Making at Murano and Venice, by B. Harvey Carroll, Jr., is a rare eyewitness account of beadma...
With the possible exception of the Egyptian and Syrian beadmakers of Roman times, no glass bead prod...
Interesting accounts of the manufacture of Venetian glass beads turn up in the most unlikely places....
Neuwirth: Perlen aus Gablonz: Historismus, Jugendstil/Beads from Gablonz: Historicism, Art Nouveau ...
Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, ha...
Glass Beads from Gloucester Point, Virginia, by Laurie E. Burgess and Christopher Sperling. • Borneo...
Visit the image gallery to view and download high resolution color plate images for this volume
Francis: Beads of the World: A Collector\u27s Guide with Price Reference reviewed by Stefany Tomalin...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
During the 19th and 20th centuries, Gablonz in northern Bohemia (now Jablonec nad Nisou in the Czech...
The year 2006 marks the 80th anniversary of the presentation of a Classification and Nomenclature o...
The Levin Catalogue is composed of two similar collections of glass and stone beads assembled by Mos...
One of the earliest detailed descriptions of the Venetian bead industry is contained in an obscure b...
Giovanni Giacomuzzi (1817-1872) was the driving force behind the celebrated 19th-century Venetian be...
This guide provides information relevant to the description and classification of glass beads recove...
Bead Making at Murano and Venice, by B. Harvey Carroll, Jr., is a rare eyewitness account of beadma...
With the possible exception of the Egyptian and Syrian beadmakers of Roman times, no glass bead prod...
Interesting accounts of the manufacture of Venetian glass beads turn up in the most unlikely places....
Neuwirth: Perlen aus Gablonz: Historismus, Jugendstil/Beads from Gablonz: Historicism, Art Nouveau ...
Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, ha...
Glass Beads from Gloucester Point, Virginia, by Laurie E. Burgess and Christopher Sperling. • Borneo...
Visit the image gallery to view and download high resolution color plate images for this volume
Francis: Beads of the World: A Collector\u27s Guide with Price Reference reviewed by Stefany Tomalin...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...