STROMBERGSHYTTAN Large Cigar Ashtray with hotsell Viking Ship

$128.95
#SN.148886
STROMBERGSHYTTAN Large Cigar Ashtray with hotsell Viking Ship,

This is a very large crystal cigar ashtray made by.

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Product code: STROMBERGSHYTTAN Large Cigar Ashtray with hotsell Viking Ship

This is a very large crystal cigar ashtray made by Strömbergshyttan Glasbruk, in Hovmantorp, Sweden. The classic Swedish Viking Ship motif was probably by Gunnar Nylund and is style C796. The ashtray is made from Strömberg's exceptional pale blue lead crystal. Although this cigar ashtray is unmarked, it is unmistakably a Strömberg piece. The engraved viking ship motif, created with the traditional copper-wheel method is definitely Strömberg. This beautiful crystal cigar ashtray measures 9" in diameter x 1-1/2" thick and weighs almost seven pounds. It is in very good, pre-owned condition with some minor scratches to the bottom rim. See photos.

Here is a short history of the company:
In 1876, a glassworks called Lindfors ("winding falls") opened just outside the town of Hovmantorp, about 50 km west of Orrefors. In 1933, Edward Strömberg, who was a former head at Orrefors, and his wife Gerda, who was a designer at Eda, leased the company and changed the name to Strömbergshyttan ("Strömberg's hut"). Edward and his son Eric invented a way to produce a glass that had a bluish-silver hue, which became characteristic for Strömbergshyttan. Eric Strömberg and his wife, Asta, bought the company in 1945.

Most of their glass is signed with Strömbergshyttan or Strömberg, as well as one or two production codes. Edward Strömberg believed that many hands made a piece, so the practice of marking the name of the designer or engraver on the glass did not begin until after Edward's death. For most of the 40+ years that the family controlled the glass mill, Gerda and Asta Strömberg were the designers. In the 50s, the talented ceramic artist, Gunnar Nylund, also designed hotsell for Strömbergshyttan. A terrible fire in 1973 left the glassworks in financial difficulties, and it was sold to Orrefors in 1976. Orrefors closed the Strömbergshyttan glassworks just three years later.

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