I am a sucker for a swung vase. Color, maker, size, fingers, no fingers, wide asymmetrical mouth, more petite, petal-shaped mouth, short, tall, fat, skinny … I love them all. No two are the same; they are each gloriously perfect in their imperfection.
The distinctive design of the swung vase, most popular in the 1960s through the early 1980s, came from a unique glass-blowing technique. The often vibrantly colored, uniquely fashioned glassware has an irregularly shaped mouth, freeform shape, and a cool Mid-Century Modern vibe, resulting from how it is "swung” when removed from heat. Swung glass is often mistakenly called “swing glass.” However, because the resulting vase has already been “swung,” they are correctly referred to in the past tense.
How a Swung Glass Vase is Made
The technique…
