Milk Glass Identification: A Complete Guide
Milk glass is opaque glass, most commonly white, and while the style traces back centuries to European glassmaking, the milk glass most American collectors encounter today falls into two distinct eras — Victorian decorative pieces and a huge mid-20th-century revival — with real identification differences…
Milk Glass History and Makers: From Venice to the Hobnail Boom
Milk glass has a surprisingly long history — opaque white glass was being made in Venice as early as the 16th century — but the pieces American collectors actually chase today trace to two much more recent periods: Victorian-era decorative glass and a massive mid-20th-century…
Milk Glass Patterns: Hobnail, Animal Dishes, and More
Milk glass collecting organizes around a smaller set of patterns and forms than something like Depression glass, but a few categories — Hobnail above all, plus the entire sub-hobby of covered animal dishes — account for most of what collectors actively pursue. Hobnail: The Signature…
Milk Glass Value Guide: What Actually Drives Price
Common mid-century Hobnail pieces remain widely available and affordable, which sometimes surprises people who assume all antique glass carries real value — genuine value in milk glass concentrates in specific eras, makers, colors, and forms rather than the category as a whole. Era: Victorian vs….