![]() Light Shade: 1 cup white buttercream icing + ¼ teaspoon of color.We have three shades of red in this format: Christmas Red, Red-Red and No-Taste Red. These jar icing colors make it super easy to mix your own color combinations. Medium Shade: 1 cup white buttercream icing + 40 drops of color.Dark Shade: 1 cup white buttercream icing + 80 drops of color.The Red and Crimson base colors are included in the full Color Right collection but can also be purchased individually. Dark Shade: 1 cup white buttercream icing + 100 drops of colorįeaturing ultra-concentrated colors in squeezable bottles, the Color Right system will give you bright and vibrant reds without compromising consistency.Medium Shade: 1 cup white buttercream icing + 20 drops of color.Light Shade: 1 cup white buttercream icing + 10 drops of color.The red food coloring is available in the primary color set (which also includes yellow, green and blue). This concentrated gel is great for coloring icing, batter, cookie dough and more. juice set.For Coloring Large Amounts of Icing (1 Cup or More): Food Coloring The juice set can be seen on the catalogue page below: #1307 6 pc. Each had a water set, similar to the blue line, with 14-ounce tumblers. Sales were deemed adequate for the addition of two new embossed Grape lines in 1972-73, one in amber and the second in a pastel green called Lime. The glass was produced by automatic pressing and distributed widely. ![]() The water set featured a pitcher on a pedestal with a 14-ounce tumbler. “In its Diamond Jubilee year of 1971, Indiana Glass Co., at Dunkirk, Ind., entered Carnival with a blue embossed Grape pattern. Joe Olson, entitled “Carnival Glass in the Mid 1970s”: Here’s how the introduction of Indiana's Contemporary Carnival Glass was described in a 1975 self-published paperback by O. In itself, Indiana’s Carnival is loved by many simply for what it is – bright, colourful and immensely practical. It can be a spring board to learning more about Carnival, and is often the embryonic start for a collection of Classic old Carnival. Many Carnival collectors begin by acquiring a piece of Indiana’s Carnival. Almost all the shapes were made in blue, but not all shapes were made in all three colours. Gold Carnival was introduced in 1972 and Lime Green a year or so later. Iridescent Blue was the first colour that Harvest was made in (1971). Note the "Oval Center Bowl" that is shown in two of the ads - we explain more about this piece below. A console set and snack set were made in lime green. juice set was made in gold with smaller tumblers. tumblers, water pitcher (with ice lip), covered canisters (candy or cookie jars) in three sizes, sugar/creamer/tray set, wedding bowl (& cover), butter dish, candy box (lid has a lacy edge), and candle holders. ![]() Large punch set (comprising bowl, twelve cups, twelve plastic hooks and a plastic ladle) – often called the Princess Punch set. Indiana’s Harvest Carnival pieces represent their era, and in themselves they are a compliment to, and testimony of, the popularity of mainstream Classic Carnival that began around 1906-7. And in just a few years it will be half a century old. The Carnival Glass made during the Seventies was “of its time” and today it’s retro, it’s nostalgic, it is so deliciously typical of its era. The 70s! Lava lamps, the Sony Walkman, Charlie’s Angels, ABBA, platform shoes and bell-bottoms! The pattern was introduced and made in other glass, such as milk glass, a decade or so earlier. Possibly their best-known pattern was “Harvest”, that was made during the 1970s when Carnival Glass enjoyed a major revival. of Dunkirk (Indiana, USA) is well known for its Contemporary Carnival Glass production. ![]() Harvest (also known as Harvest Grape) - Contemporary Carnival Glass made by Indiana Glass Co. ![]()
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