Short on time? Prioritize these objects and use the “how to read it” cues to see what experts see.
The list
- Roman core‑formed vessels — early color logic.  
 
- Renaissance cristallo goblets — clarity and impossibly thin stems.  
 
- Filigrana tazze — milk‑white canes trapped in air.  
 
- Reticello bowls — crisscrossed canes with trapped air diamonds.  
 
- Millefiori dishes — slice patterns like pastry.  
 
- Avventurina vases — copper stardust.  
 
- Engraved baroque goblets — cold‑worked narratives.  
 
- Specchi veneziani — mirrors as furniture and theater.  
 
- 19th‑century revival pieces — historicism reimagined.  
 
- Venini and Scarpa — modernist restraint in a hot craft.  
 
- Sculptural sommerso — color in strata.  
 
- Contemporary experiments — glass thinking like architecture.
 
How to read a piece
- Look for the pontil mark: centered and polished (or proudly left).  
 
- Follow the cane: does the line stay true or twist?  
 
- Check bubbles: accidental seeds vs. intentional reticello diamonds.  
 
- Feel the weight and balance (if allowed): thick foot, thin lip — a master’s confidence.
 
Pro tip: Spend five minutes near a single chandelier and trace how each arm attaches. You’ll never see lighting the same way again.