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Green mosaïque tumbler x2 baccarat
500,00  TTC Add to cart

Green mosaïque tumbler x2 baccarat

500,00  TTC

3 in stock

The Baccarat Mosaïque tumblers add bold color and a festive spirit to the table.

  • Set of two Blue Mosaïque tumblers Baccarat
  • Tumblers signed Baccarat, with box and certificate of authenticity
  • A suitable gift packaging – Iconic & Sophisticated
  • New collection Baccarat 2017
  • Ø 8,3 cm Height 10 cm 22 cl

DELIVERY TIME

European Union : shipping with GLS, the delivery time is about 5 days.
Outside the European Union : shipping with GLS, the delivery time is about one or two weeks, depending of the custom clearance.
You will receive an email from Vessière Cristaux with all the tracking informations. If you have urgent request, you can call us (+33.3.83.75.10.55) or contact Michaël by WhatsApp (+33.6.17.02.12.25).

WE PROVIDE INSURANCE FOR YOUR ORDER

With more than 138 years of experience, our export team takes the greatest care to package each order. A damaged product? We will send a new one. A lost parcel? We will send a new one. The shipping cost include an insurance break and lost.

CUSTOMER REVIEW

ENJOY TAXFREE

For a delivery outside the European Union, you can pay your order without VAT. Please, use the coupon code FREETAX into your cart.

REVIEWS

ADDITIONNAL INFORMATIONS

SET OF 2 BLUE MOSAÏQUE TUMBLERS BACCARAT :

SET OF 2 BLUE MOSAÏQUE TUMBLERS BACCARAT, The Baccarat Mosaïque tumblers add bold color and a festive spirit to the table. Box of Mosaïque tumblers Baccarat.

 Box of Mosaïque tumblers Baccarat :

♦ THE FIRST FRENCH CRYSTAL GLASSWORKS : 

On 16 October 1764, Louis XV authorized the creation of what would become the prestigious Baccarat crystal works. Having convinced the king, there remained the question of finding a manufacturing site. The choice fell on Baccarat, a village already known for its drapers. It had space, a willing workforce, but also a river, the Meurthe, which would soon be running through the glassworks and delivering a regular supply of timber floated from upstream. Everything was in place. In 1766, an entire range of glass, mirrors and “Bohemia-style” glassware was produced in the furnaces. While the freshly created enterprise paid little heed to the quality of its production at the time (no crystal strictly speaking!), it prospered nonetheless. But the Revolution and the wars that came in its wake deprived Baccarat of export markets in Europe. With its raw materials requisitioned and the young men making up its workforce being sent to the front, the firm went bankrupt. The factory was bought and sold several times, scraping by until 1816.

It rose from the ashes on this date as a result of Louis XVIII granting Aimé-Gabriel d’Artigues, the owner of the Vonêche crystal works in Belgium, an exemption from customs duties, provided he established a crystal manufacture in France. D’Artigues chose Baccarat where he took over the Sainte-Anne glassworks, converting it into a crystal glassworks.