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Lalique Space Vase
Four caryatids blast this angular vase off into the cosmic space of our imaginations from Lalique...$27,000.00

Lalique Thistle Black Vase
This limited version is handed painted with black enamel from Lalique...$5,900.00
Lalique Tianlong Black Vase
Entirely fashioned by hand, this vase requires great artistic and technical mastery from Lalique...$45,000.00
Lalique Lijiang Vase
This amazing creation reinterprets the codes, ancestral symbols, thousand-year-old heritage of Far East from Lalique...$6,785.00

Lalique Tianlong Vase
Limited edition vase featuring the dragon Tianlong from the China Mood Collection by Lalique...$45,000.00
Lalique Abundance Bowl in Gold
Limited edition bowl from Lalique...$45,240.00
Lalique Ziela Panther Lost Wax
Limited edition panther figurine from Lalique...$44,550.00
Lalique Venus Nude, Limited Edition Black
Limited edition figurine from Lalique...$70,000.00
Lalique Aurora Vase
Limited edition vase named after the Goddess of daylight from the Daydream Collection by Lalique...$17,500.00
   

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Facts about Lalique:

René Lalique became synonymous with French Art Nouveau decorative arts. René Lalique was born in 1860 and first began designing fine jewelry in Paris in 1881. Lalique pursued increasingly more innovative experimentation in glass commencing around 1883. Early works used the familiar "lost wax" technique by which the model is made in wax while a mold is formed around the model. Then, the wax is melted and molten glass is poured into the mold. Lalique glass was made in this manner until approximately 1905 at which time the factory was redesigned for a larger production.

As such, the individual uniqueness of each example of Lalique glass came to an end with the end of the one-time only molding technique around wax models. The success of this venture resulted in the opening of his own glassworks at Combs-la-Ville in 1909. During the art nouveau period, Lalique was well known for a wide variety of objects including perfume bottles, vases, inkwells, decorative boxes, and bookends.

Lalique glass is lead based, either mold blown or pressed. Favored motifs during the Art Nouveau period were dancing nymphs, fish, dragonflies, and foliage. Characteristically the glass is crystal in combination with acid-etched relief. In addition to vases, clocks, automobile mascots, stemware, and bottles, many other useful objects were produced. While not well known, Lalique also experimented with bronze and other materials as well.

Crystal Classics is one of only a few authorized Lalique retailers online.

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