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This
ware was decorated according to Ottoman taste
and customs, either with geometric cut patterns
or flower motifs, avoiding human and animal
figures. As on the porcelain made for the eastern
market, gold and silver were used abundantly
in the painted decoration on glass, and the
small coloured motifs and flowers were executed
with outstanding artistry. The principal colours
used on these objects were cobalt blue, turquoise,
a yellow which shone bright green when the light
slanted on it, ruby red, pink, emerald green
and milk white. Cut glass objects were enhanced
by knobs in the form of bronze flowers studded
with diamonds and other precious stones.
Examples of this type of ware can be seen in
the European Glass section at Topkapi
Palace in Istanbul, and in the Giritli collection
of Bohemian crystal. The origin of one group
of oriental type opaline glassware in turquoise
or pale green made for export to Ottoman Turkey
and Persia remains unresolved, with scholars
divided as to whether this ware was made in
Bohemia, France or Venice.
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