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In the Victorian era scent bottles were often made of pressed glass, with silver or silver-plate rims and cut glass or imitation cut glass stoppers.

Generally, the customer purchased the bottle empty and had it filled by a chemist or perfumier, as ready filled bottles of perfume were not yet on the market.

The variety of shapes was enormous. The larger scent bottles were made in the shape of flagons or decanters. In the 1870s a new design was produced: the double ended bottle. This was a slim cylindrical bottle with a round or polygonal surface. Some were produced more... in clear glass, some coloured dark blue, red, green, or yellow, and some were decorated in the Nailsea style. At each end were silver or plated caps, which were heavily chased or moulded. One half of the bottle was for scent and usually had a screw cap, while the other end was hinged, often spring loaded for fast access, and was for smelling salts.

Some bottles hinged in the middle, and when you opened them there was the grating of a vinaigrette on one side and on the other a recess with a glass-covered photograph. The outer ends had normal hinge- or screw-caps so that either part of the bottle could be filled with scent.

The production of scent bottles continued into the twentieth century, though it became more customary to buy scent in ready-filled bottles from cosmetic houses. These 'package' bottles in themselves have become the object of much decorative skill, and no doubt in the not-too-distant future they will be sought after by collectors.

Some manufacturers supplied scent bottles with rubber bulbs, which could be attached to the top of the bottle to produce a fine spray of scent. Although some types of scent bottle can be expensive, there are still many examples available at a reasonable price. less...

Emile Galle, (1846-1904) was a French designer of glass, furniture and jewellery and leader of the Nancy School in the applied arts. He was undoubtedly the most outstanding of the French glassmakers of the late nineteenth century.

Born in Nancy, the son of the owner of a prosperous glass and faience factory, he studied botany, drawing and landscape painting and from 1862 to 1864, the techniques of glass production at Weimar Art School in Germany. After further travels, study and work he returned to Nancy in 1873, and began to produce fine pottery, jewellery, and furniture in his own more... glass studio. In 1874 he was given control of the family glass business.

Galle began experimenting with coloured glass, attempting to improve the range of colours without diminishing the transparency of the material. These early experiments culminated in the vivid blue glass, created by means of cobalt oxides, which came to the attention of the discriminating public at the Exposition Universelle in 1878 in Paris, where he received four gold medals.

At the Exposition Universelle of 1889 in Paris his glass art became the icon of the Art Nouveau movement.

He also opened a carpentry shop employing cabinet makers to produce furniture, specialising in marquetry using botanical themes as his inspiration.

In the ensuing decade, he continued to experiment with various colours, eventually achieving success with the full range of colour from deep purple to bright orange. Throughout his long career, however, Galle was pre-occupied with the decoration of glassware rather than the manipulation or transformation of the substance itself. The earliest type of embellishment consisted of enamelling, a technique which he gradually improved. Galle's finest glassware was produced at the turn of the century.

By the time of his death in 1904, his workshop had become a highly successful business with a considerable output, though quality was never sacrificed to quantity.

Galle always signed his works "Galle". The signature may be engraved, acid-etching or enamelled.

Up to the time of the First World War, the factory continued under the guidance of Galle's friend, the painter Victor Prouve, and glass made in this ten-year period (1904-14) continued to bear the word "Galle" preceded by a small star.

Production was halted by the course of the war, but some attempts at reviving the business afterwards were only partly successful and the Galle factory finally closed in 1935.

Because of the popularity and high prices of Galle glass the field is attractive to copyists and forgers. If the item is not a genuine Galle piece, and the seller recognises this, the description will include terms such as "in the style of Galle", "bears the signature of Galle" or "in the style of Emile Galle". If the seller is trying to pass off the item as genuine Galle, experience gained in handling Galle glass is the best way to tell a forgery from an original less...

Galle antique French cameo glass perfume atomizer, signed…
Signed Galle Antique French Cameo Glass Perfume Atomizer, 17cm

Galle antique French cameo glass perfume atomizer, signed 'Galle', 6.69 in. high

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A cameo glass perfume atomiser by Emile Galle (1846-1904), the…
Galle's Amber Cameo Glass Perfume Atomiser

A cameo glass perfume atomiser by Emile Galle (1846-1904), the slender conical bottle featuring strappy foliage and swaying flower stems and berry clusters upon an amber ground, signed in cameo to the lower body, the silvered mounts marked made in France,

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A cameo glass perfume atomiser by Emile Galle (1846-1904), the…
Emile Galle cameo glass perfume atomiser with silvered mounts

A cameo glass perfume atomiser by Emile Galle (1846-1904), the cylindrical atomiser with carved and polished russet flowers on a tomato red ground, signature in cameo to the body, with a ground pontil, original paper label to base with handwritten numerals

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A cameo glass perfume atomiser, by Emile Galle tapering in form,…
Floriate Cameo Glass Perfume Atomiser by Emile Galle

A cameo glass perfume atomiser, by Emile Galle tapering in form, with floriate decoration, 7.68 in. high

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A Galle cut cameo glass perfume atomiser, early 20th century,…
Galle Cut Cameo Glass Perfume Atomiser

A Galle cut cameo glass perfume atomiser, early 20th century, decorated with flowers and leaves, carved signature, original fittings, 9.06 in. high

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A cameo glass perfume bottle by Emile Galle (1846-1904), circa…
Emile Galle Red Bleeding Heart Perfume Bottle

A cameo glass perfume bottle by Emile Galle (1846-1904), circa 1900, Nancy France, the cushion profile rectangular bottle with a cylindrical neck and the original mushroom long stopper, decorated with cameo overlay of trailing bleeding heart decoration in

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A cameo glass perfume burner by Emile Galle (1846-1904), circa…
Emile Galle Cameo Glass Perfume Burner

A cameo glass perfume burner by Emile Galle (1846-1904), circa 1900, Nancy France, the compressed bottle shaped burner with a pierced bronze domed cover supporting the small light fitting, with cameo overlay of aquilegia and lily leaves in aubergine colour

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