Jadeite Green Swirl-Ribbed Tilt Ball Pitcher, 1930s–40s View Watchlist >
- Winning Bid: $68.05
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- High Bidder: Nevyg
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Lot # E543
System ID # 28457320
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Jadeite Green Swirl-Ribbed Tilt Ball Pitcher, 1930s–40s
A tilt ball pitcher in opaque jadeite green glass, molded in a diagonal swirl-rib pattern that spirals across the globe-shaped body and catches light along every twist. The banded collar, generous loop handle, and pulled pour spout are all executed in the same soft, milky mint — color uniform and glowing from base to rim. The forward tilt isn't affectation: the whole form was engineered to tip into a pour rather than demand a full wrist rotation, a small ergonomic kindness that made this shape a fixture on American tables from the Depression through the postwar years.
Jadeite glass — opaque, iron-oxide-tinted, and distinctly American — hit its stride in the 1930s as a cheerful, affordable alternative to the hand-painted china it displaced. Anchor Hocking's Fire-King line made it famous, but Jeannette, Bartlett-Collins, and a handful of smaller houses all worked the same vein. The tilt-ball form appeared across multiple manufacturers and decades, becoming one of the defining silhouettes of mid-century kitchen glass. This example is non-reactive under UV, consistent with pre-1960s American jadeite production.
CONDITION
Excellent with no damage noted. Color is even and bright, the ribbed optic is crisp, and the rim, spout, and handle are all intact. Light surface sheen consistent with age and gentle use.
DIMENSIONS / SPECIFICATIONS
- Overall: 8" H × 6¾" W × 8½" D
- Weight: 3 lbs 13 oz
- Form: Tilt ball pitcher with swirl-ribbed optic body
- Glass: Opaque jadeite green; non-reactive under UV
- Campbell's Soup Can (4" H) Shown for Scale — Not Included