Visiting Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion? You must join the virtual exhibition queue when you arrive. If capacity has been reached for the day, the queue will close early.

Learn more

Search The Collection

Filter By

Object Type / Material
Geographic Location
Date / Era
Department
Show Only:
  • As part of the Met's Open Access policy, you can freely copy, modify and distribute this image, even for commercial purposes.
    APIPublic domain data for this object can also be accessed using the Met's Open Access API
  • Objects with changed or unknown ownership in continental Europe between 1933-1945. Learn more
Showing 594 results for The Thomas Jones Decorative Glass Co.
Sort By:
John Barbot
ca. 1760
Thomas How
ca. 1724–36
Imperial Armory, Tula (south of Moscow), Russia
ca. 1780–85
Sir Edward Burne-Jones
1868–77
Sasanian
ca. 7th century CE
The Thomas Jones Decorative Glass Co.
early 20th century (?)
Camille Pissarro
1891–92
Camille Pissarro
1872
British
ca. 1735
Roman
late 1st century BCE
British
ca. 1173–80
Sèvres Manufactory
1758
Indian, Vizagapatam
ca. 1760–65
Turkish, in the style of Turkman armor
late 15th–16th century
Louis C. Tiffany
1893–96
Thomas Tucker
1828–38
Byzantine (ivory); Spanish (setting)
10th century (ivory); late 11th century (setting)
James Morisset
hallmarked for 1797–98
Spanish
late 11th century
Vincennes Manufactory
1754
Jean Cousin the Elder
ca. 1555
Louis C. Tiffany
ca. 1891–93
late 13th century
Sèvres Manufactory
1760
Sèvres Manufactory
ca. 1759–60
Thomas Cains
1830–40
Christopher Dresser
ca. 1888
Thomas Pelletier
ca. 1690
George A. Schastey & Co.
1881–82
Roman
300–350
Frankish
5th–6th century
Meissen Manufactory
ca. 1725–30
British
ca. 1780–90
Thomas Cains
1812–27
Philip Webb
1861
French
ca. 1235–45
Meissen Manufactory
ca. 1732
Quezal Art Glass and Decorating Company
ca. 1900–1920
Paul Gudin Le Jeune
clock ca. 1750, figures decorated ca. 1737/38
South Boston Flint Glass Works
1813–30