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Your cart is empty.4.4 out of 5 stars
- #686,303 in Kitchen & Dining (See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining)
- #129 in Snifters
Made In the famous Italian Glass factory, Interglass, these glasses are made of highest quality cry>stal and are hand decorated with 24 karat gold. Since the beginning the company has concentrated its efforts on realization of articles with high artistic and historical content referring them to the Florentine Renaissance Age. Magnificent contrasting colors will enhance your bar and dinner table, the rare drinkware will surely be a topic for conversation at your parties and your guests will want a set of their own.
silvia portillo valles
Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2023
Beautiful
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2022
This is the most well decorated goblet of kings that literally makes you feel like Charlemagne drinking after his conquest of western Europe. Or Ghengis Khan. Alexander the Great. Attila the Hun. Maybe even make you feel like Vlad the impaler or Norse conquerors, drinking the blood of the conquered enemies in a finely decorated glass goblet like this. This goblet can give you that sensation without having to commission a fleet of ships, raise great armies, and burn great cities to the ground. Nor do you need to dress in a metal helmet with horns affixed to it. A must have for anyone desiring that regal feeling of being a warrior king.
A. Person
Reviewed in the United States on December 26, 2019
Very very poor quality. Looks good as a prop, but is cheap. I've been to Italy twice, and I've seen what good glass looks like. These people are charging the same prices as the other people, but aren't putting in even 10% the effort. The engravings on these glasses are like chicken scratch. It may be hand engraved, but it looks like a child did it. There's lots of gold on I, but they didn't paint within the lines. Take a close look at the images here, and you'll see what I mean.A side note is that they're really really thick, which might be a sign theyre using inferior glass. When I went to the glass blowing shop in Venice, they prided themselves on how thin, but incredibly strong their glasses were. They dropped them on the floor and clanked them loudly to prove it. One of these came in the mail broken, and it was wrapped in bubble packing!In conclusion, this is imposter glassware. It's only good enough to convince the unfamiliar that it is valuable and good. In reality, its some worthless factory produced guff. Human hands ARE involved in making it, "technically," but no artisan has ever been near these items.I got an assessment of these for Christmas, so I'm leaving this review for each of the items I got and can personally attest to.
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