Every piece of green depression glass in my house glows. Most of it was my grandmother's and was acquired by her in the 30's and 40's. I'm now convinced that all the classic green depression era glass glows.
Thanks for this! It's the the first video I've seen demonstrating how 395/365 illuminate differently. We hear this all the time, but some folks still think 365 green illumination means uranium glass. 👌
I like the manganese glass myself as long as it has a natural purple tent not too dark. I Also like mixing different things together. cadmium glass ,lucite manganese and uranium.
Thanks for this video, that was my classic rookie mistake..l I lost my mind and bought ten pieces of manganese glass at the thrift store with my 356 in hand. It was a learning experience, I have yet to actually find a single piece of uranium, but I continue to hunt.
I bought a 395 Black Light at the HmDpt big box store for $14.95 in 2022. They are available more often in the Spring. Why Spring? Here in the desert...they are used to locate scorpions.and other yuckies. A great tool to have for Vaseline/Uraniam glass verification. Plus, if you are a pet owner, it locates urine accidents and spit-up/vomit areas. (You'll be unpleasantly surprisef.)
I am a subscriber from your other channel. I had never heard of this type of glass until a couple weeks ago when I got my first piece of uranium glass. Now I am seeing it everywhere and you made this channel. Bizarre
Eeeek that manganese glow is an ugly yellowish green. I would cringe and put it back not even knowing it was manganese doing it. I adore the bright green glow of actual uranium glass.
Honestly I was thinking about strictly collecting uranium glass. Until I discovered other cool glowing variants of antique glass. Yeah I agree if it looks unaesthetic I’ll put it right back. I keep black lights. Like carpenters keep pencils. 😂 everywhere
Popped over and subbed, Speg. Once upon a time, the wife and I had some.....years ago... and one of us ( me) decided that I wanted to add to my vintage Coca Cola collection...you see where this went. Anyway, fun seeing the new channel! Take care, be safe and God bless! I'll be looking for more content....and more Coin Guy videos, too! 🇺🇸
I’ve got a few Kanawha amberina water bottles that have manganese in them and it really brings the piece to life. Which I say is a desirable trait. The subtle orangish yellow areas pop out.
Now thats solved. I'm preparing for a new adventure. She..as in the wife loves to stop at any and all antique, thrift you name it. All I ever cared about was a deal on silverware. I'll sneak this 1 in. Add some fun to our hunts again.
It’s definitely a fun thing to do with the family! We’re always on the hunt for multiple things and divide and conquer 😆 He usually finds the best stuff!
@@mrsspegtacular6484 Aquired a perfect 16 hole flower frog. Bought a few things from ebay. Be here by Tuesday. Wanted some extra motivation. Ended up having 9 uranium marbles in my jug of them. Train is leaving the station guess were on it now.
I carry both a 365 and 395 light. I use the 365 light to spot anything that glows from a distace. I then use the 395 to weed out manganese but the real reason I do this is because my UG display has 395 lights, so I need to make sure any piece I find will match with my collection. The 395 in my pocket matches the frequency of my display. Slag glass, custard glass and certain pieces look "off" because of the "purple" from my display. Whether or not you like the 365 lights or the 395 is up to you.
If a piece of glass has enough manganese in it it will glow under 395, but as you have shown it’s a more mucky sludgy green glow. One of the best glows is from good old Vaseline glass from around the late 1800 early 1900, a pease of Davidson Pearline is a good example.
Is there a good online store to buy Uranium Glassware? My stepson is collecting it now and I would like to get him some. Thank you for the advice and sharing good video. Have a great day.
I just found a white anchor hocking heart shaped bowl that glows completely green under 365nm, but only glows with the 395nm if i press it flush with the piece! Otherwise it just gives that purple glow from afar with the 395nm. I ended up putting my geiger to use and it went up to 100cpm and didnt fall lower than 90cpm. Im wondering if its a glaze, definitely uranium though!
Great videos! Very educational. In your video titled ; (THIS matters when searching for Uranium glass! Buyer Beware!), you shine the 395 on what looks like a creamer bowl with a flaired top at the 22 second to 30 second mark. Do you have any information on that bowl and the design on it? My mother has a large uranium planter bowl/vase with that design and I have been trying to identify it with no success. When I saw that on your video I almost crapped myself! Any information would be Greatly appreciated. I could send pictures of it if there is a way to contact you safely.
Thank you for this I ordered a 395 black light to be correct when determining, I was going to my glass I like to collect and found one was glowing pink under the 365 so now I'm on a discovery lol I get mixed Info on the pink glow so if you happen to know why something Crystal would glow pink or I'm just assuming it's Crystal lol thank you again
Thanks for the tip they have the cheap ones on amazon in 395nm as well and I don't trust the reviews so saw some pictures of uranium glass and regular milk glass in the review pictures so I bet it's really 395mn for $6.99.
365 nanometer, nm, black light can be dangerous to your eyes or anyone else standing close by. The 395 or 400 nm wavelengths are not. It is safer to just use the 395 or 400 nm wavelengths to avoid any problems. If you have a public display, stay with the safer 395 or 400 nm wavelengths lights. The 395 or 400 nm wavelengths are super cheap, and you can see glass fluorescing easily. Also, if you price strip lighting in the 365 nm wavelength, they are very expensive, hundreds of dollars, and they are dangerous to the public should you have a public display. The 395 or 400 nm wavelengths blacklight strips are super cheap and safe. That is my understanding.
10:20 This is selenium glass, and I hate you for having a piece of it when I have literally looked through thousands of items to try to find it but never finding a single piece. 😤
here’s some info from the internet for you: Solarization of Glass An interesting characteristic of colorless glasses which contain manganese dioxide as a decolorizer is their tendency to turn different shades of purple when exposed to the rays of the sun or to other ultra-violet sources. It is a photochemical phenomenon that is not yet perfectly understood.
@@ThePeopleDemandUraniumGlass I still have never seen anything showing it happen, but I have seen glass do some wild and crazy things thru striking and fumes. I'll take your word on it for now but I would really like to see this effect happen like some before and after pics
@@burnsblownglass2514I highly doubt this happens to newer glass. I think it is mostly antique glass that was made with certain magnesium compounds. That is why a lot of collectors are attracted to the lightly purple tint because they know it is from a certain time period. In fact there are reseller who will place clear glass on a window sill to see if turns purple. If it does, they can get more money for the piece than the boring clear glass.
So many errors... Where to begin? First of all, it's not, "spectrum", it's "wavelength". And its not, "black light", it's "ultraviolet". "Black light" specifically denotes a 365nm, tube-based, UV lamp. And leaving out, "nanometers", is not helpful. At least once you should be saying, "365 nanometers" so viewers have some idea of what the delineation indicates. Next, put your 395nm flashlight into a drawer as a spare (though 395nm is useful for making selenium and cadmium glass glow but they are less common. Save it for them). "Ultraviolet"means just that, that humans cannot see the emission. "But", you complain, "I can see plenty of light from the 395nm!" Yes you can, and that's the problem. You noted that some, "black light" was reflecting off of the white bowl you lamped. You can't see UV light. What you're seeing is the tons of visible, violet light emitted by 395nm LED's that you're seeing and that's why, even if an item has some glow to it, that glow is washed out by the visible light. Vaseline and U-glass glow nicely under 395nm, but the entire point is to see the glow from the UV, not from visible light. I have a couple of early, unfiltered Cree 365nm flashlights that actually emit a lot of BROWN light along with whatever UV they emit. Talk about useless! What Vaseline and U-glass collectors care about is the glow. Once you dump the 395nm light, using a properly filtered 365nm obviates all of the bizarre discussions of manganese or uranium. Who really cares what the doping agent is if it glows nicely? A properly filtered light is just that. The best UV LED's, such as Nichias, have a very narrow emission spectrum with the desired wavelength centered as a peak with a little bleed on both sides. But even with such a narrow output, the best results are still obtained by using a UV bandpass filter on the flashlight to remove as much of the visible light as possible. If you're using an unfiltered light, you're still not there. Now, you were stuck on 395nm and 365nm. But flashlights are now available in mid wave, (MW, 310nm) an short wave (SW 254nm). The white bowl that did nothing under 395nm (it actually did but you couldn't see it due to the visible light) and looked pale green under 365nm will be bright, powder blue under SW (MW, depending on the mix), glows a weak, dark purple. This is how my Westmoreland Hen-on-Nest milk glass reacts. Another option is to use a 405nm UV laser, cheap things easily found. Makes Vaseline and U-glass glows like a beacon and requires no filter because there is no emission spectrum: it's pretty much only at 405nm. The downside is that it lights up just a small spot, useless for enjoying items but not awful for determining what glows in shops and flea markets from 50' away.
Having a Geiger counter is helpful if your unsure as well It definitely helps. Great video!
check out some of my other videos where I use my Geiger counter too :)
Every piece of green depression glass in my house glows. Most of it was my grandmother's and was acquired by her in the 30's and 40's. I'm now convinced that all the classic green depression era glass glows.
Thanks for this! It's the the first video I've seen demonstrating how 395/365 illuminate differently. We hear this all the time, but some folks still think 365 green illumination means uranium glass. 👌
Glad it was helpful! I think it was necessary to help people not get burnt.
I like the manganese glass myself as long as it has a natural purple tent not too dark. I Also like mixing different things together. cadmium glass ,lucite manganese and uranium.
Thanks for this video, that was my classic rookie mistake..l I lost my mind and bought ten pieces of manganese glass at the thrift store with my 356 in hand. It was a learning experience, I have yet to actually find a single piece of uranium, but I continue to hunt.
Lead glass glows bluish-white. I was shining my blacklight in my drink glass collection and a set of highball glasses glowed that color.
I bought a 395 Black Light at the HmDpt big box store for $14.95 in 2022. They are available more often in the Spring. Why Spring? Here in the desert...they are used to locate scorpions.and other yuckies.
A great tool to have for Vaseline/Uraniam glass verification.
Plus, if you are a pet owner, it locates urine accidents and spit-up/vomit areas. (You'll be unpleasantly surprisef.)
I am a subscriber from your other channel. I had never heard of this type of glass until a couple weeks ago when I got my first piece of uranium glass. Now I am seeing it everywhere and you made this channel. Bizarre
Welcome aboard! maybe it was meant to be ;)
Eeeek that manganese glow is an ugly yellowish green. I would cringe and put it back not even knowing it was manganese doing it. I adore the bright green glow of actual uranium glass.
Honestly I was thinking about strictly collecting uranium glass. Until I discovered other cool glowing variants of antique glass. Yeah I agree if it looks unaesthetic I’ll put it right back. I keep black lights. Like carpenters keep pencils. 😂 everywhere
Interesting video. Thanks for the insight.
Popped over and subbed, Speg. Once upon a time, the wife and I had some.....years ago... and one of us ( me) decided that I wanted to add to my vintage Coca Cola collection...you see where this went. Anyway, fun seeing the new channel! Take care, be safe and God bless! I'll be looking for more content....and more Coin Guy videos, too! 🇺🇸
Love it. Good info.
Very nice video. Thank you.
I’ve got a few Kanawha amberina water bottles that have manganese in them and it really brings the piece to life. Which I say is a desirable trait. The subtle orangish yellow areas pop out.
Now thats solved. I'm preparing for a new adventure. She..as in the wife loves to stop at any and all antique, thrift you name it. All I ever cared about was a deal on silverware. I'll sneak this 1 in. Add some fun to our hunts again.
It’s definitely a fun thing to do with the family! We’re always on the hunt for multiple things and divide and conquer 😆 He usually finds the best stuff!
@@mrsspegtacular6484 Aquired a perfect 16 hole flower frog. Bought a few things from ebay. Be here by Tuesday. Wanted some extra motivation. Ended up having 9 uranium marbles in my jug of them. Train is leaving the station guess were on it now.
Thanks Speg. Appreciate the lesson. On the search now.
good luck! it’s still out there by the handfuls!
Thank you!
Thanks for watching 😊
Great info. I did not know the 365/395 difference. Wonder if they make a smaller 395 light to carry and check glass.
They make a variety of sizes 😊
Thanks @@mrsspegtacular6484
Thanks Speg, another rabbit hole I’m down that my wife is mad about. How comfy is your couch?
actually.. super comfortable! I sleep there often.
I carry both a 365 and 395 light. I use the 365 light to spot anything that glows from a distace. I then use the 395 to weed out manganese but the real reason I do this is because my UG display has 395 lights, so I need to make sure any piece I find will match with my collection. The 395 in my pocket matches the frequency of my display.
Slag glass, custard glass and certain pieces look "off" because of the "purple" from my display. Whether or not you like the 365 lights or the 395 is up to you.
In my experience a lot of people do not care why the glass glows, they just want the glowly glass. Some are purists but not many.
Those are called
"the ignorants."
Manganese glass is pre 1915
Thank you for the guidance! I’m just now finding out about this glass. Do you recommend 51 or 100 LED with the Vansky flashlight?
If a piece of glass has enough manganese in it it will glow under 395, but as you have shown it’s a more mucky sludgy green glow. One of the best glows is from good old Vaseline glass from around the late 1800 early 1900, a pease of Davidson Pearline is a good example.
Is there a good online store to buy Uranium Glassware? My stepson is collecting it now and I would like to get him some. Thank you for the advice and sharing good video. Have a great day.
Well done Speg! :-)
I just found a white anchor hocking heart shaped bowl that glows completely green under 365nm, but only glows with the 395nm if i press it flush with the piece! Otherwise it just gives that purple glow from afar with the 395nm. I ended up putting my geiger to use and it went up to 100cpm and didnt fall lower than 90cpm. Im wondering if its a glaze, definitely uranium though!
Great videos! Very educational. In your video titled ; (THIS matters when searching for Uranium glass! Buyer Beware!), you shine the 395 on what looks like a creamer bowl with a flaired top at the 22 second to 30 second mark. Do you have any information on that bowl and the design on it? My mother has a large uranium planter bowl/vase with that design and I have been trying to identify it with no success.
When I saw that on your video I almost crapped myself! Any information would be Greatly appreciated. I could send pictures of it if there is a way to contact you safely.
Thank you for this I ordered a 395 black light to be correct when determining, I was going to my glass I like to collect and found one was glowing pink under the 365 so now I'm on a discovery lol I get mixed Info on the pink glow so if you happen to know why something Crystal would glow pink or I'm just assuming it's Crystal lol thank you again
That milk glass with manganese boat is a Remember The Maine a commemorative for the Spanish American War.
Thanks for the tip they have the cheap ones on amazon in 395nm as well and I don't trust the reviews so saw some pictures of uranium glass and regular milk glass in the review pictures so I bet it's really 395mn for $6.99.
A proper geigercounter may help..
What is the composition of glass, which appears blue in visible light and produces dim purple-brownish luminescence under UV?
You should finish the test with a dosimeter
Does yellow canary glass (vaseline) glow brighter than green uranium glass?
Are spirit Halloween uv bulbs 365 or 395?
365 nanometer, nm, black light can be dangerous to your eyes or anyone else standing close by. The 395 or 400 nm wavelengths are not. It is safer to just use the 395 or 400 nm wavelengths to avoid any problems. If you have a public display, stay with the safer 395 or 400 nm wavelengths lights. The 395 or 400 nm wavelengths are super cheap, and you can see glass fluorescing easily. Also, if you price strip lighting in the 365 nm wavelength, they are very expensive, hundreds of dollars, and they are dangerous to the public should you have a public display. The 395 or 400 nm wavelengths blacklight strips are super cheap and safe. That is my understanding.
10:20 This is selenium glass, and I hate you for having a piece of it when I have literally looked through thousands of items to try to find it but never finding a single piece. 😤
As a glassblower, I have never heard of clear glass getting some sun to it and turning it purplish brown... Sunlight doesn't change glass colors
it’s a “feature” due to some of the additives. think more along the lines of the additives changing color rather than the glass if that makes sense.
here’s some info from the internet for you:
Solarization of Glass
An interesting characteristic of colorless glasses which contain manganese dioxide as a decolorizer is their tendency to turn different shades of purple when exposed to the rays of the sun or to other ultra-violet sources. It is a photochemical phenomenon that is not yet perfectly understood.
@@ThePeopleDemandUraniumGlass I still have never seen anything showing it happen, but I have seen glass do some wild and crazy things thru striking and fumes. I'll take your word on it for now but I would really like to see this effect happen like some before and after pics
@@burnsblownglass2514I highly doubt this happens to newer glass. I think it is mostly antique glass that was made with certain magnesium compounds. That is why a lot of collectors are attracted to the lightly purple tint because they know it is from a certain time period. In fact there are reseller who will place clear glass on a window sill to see if turns purple. If it does, they can get more money for the piece than the boring clear glass.
So many errors... Where to begin? First of all, it's not, "spectrum", it's "wavelength". And its not, "black light", it's "ultraviolet". "Black light" specifically denotes a 365nm, tube-based, UV lamp. And leaving out, "nanometers", is not helpful. At least once you should be saying, "365 nanometers" so viewers have some idea of what the delineation indicates. Next, put your 395nm flashlight into a drawer as a spare (though 395nm is useful for making selenium and cadmium glass glow but they are less common. Save it for them). "Ultraviolet"means just that, that humans cannot see the emission. "But", you complain, "I can see plenty of light from the 395nm!" Yes you can, and that's the problem. You noted that some, "black light" was reflecting off of the white bowl you lamped. You can't see UV light. What you're seeing is the tons of visible, violet light emitted by 395nm LED's that you're seeing and that's why, even if an item has some glow to it, that glow is washed out by the visible light. Vaseline and U-glass glow nicely under 395nm, but the entire point is to see the glow from the UV, not from visible light. I have a couple of early, unfiltered Cree 365nm flashlights that actually emit a lot of BROWN light along with whatever UV they emit. Talk about useless!
What Vaseline and U-glass collectors care about is the glow. Once you dump the 395nm light, using a properly filtered 365nm obviates all of the bizarre discussions of manganese or uranium. Who really cares what the doping agent is if it glows nicely? A properly filtered light is just that. The best UV LED's, such as Nichias, have a very narrow emission spectrum with the desired wavelength centered as a peak with a little bleed on both sides. But even with such a narrow output, the best results are still obtained by using a UV bandpass filter on the flashlight to remove as much of the visible light as possible. If you're using an unfiltered light, you're still not there.
Now, you were stuck on 395nm and 365nm. But flashlights are now available in mid wave, (MW, 310nm) an short wave (SW 254nm). The white bowl that did nothing under 395nm (it actually did but you couldn't see it due to the visible light) and looked pale green under 365nm will be bright, powder blue under SW (MW, depending on the mix), glows a weak, dark purple. This is how my Westmoreland Hen-on-Nest milk glass reacts.
Another option is to use a 405nm UV laser, cheap things easily found. Makes Vaseline and U-glass glows like a beacon and requires no filter because there is no emission spectrum: it's pretty much only at 405nm. The downside is that it lights up just a small spot, useless for enjoying items but not awful for determining what glows in shops and flea markets from 50' away.