This is lovely piece of early 20th century hand-blown British Art Nouveau Art Glass, probably Stuart and Sons.
During the late Victorian era there was popular demand for decorative wares made from clear or coloured glass with applied trailing. The trails can be in the form of simple thin lines, either vertical, horizontal, or a continuing spiral around the vessel. Glass with applied trailing was used by many glass manufacturers from the Stourbridge area of England, including Stuart & Sons, Stevens & Williams, Thomas Webb and Boulton & Mills.
I am attributing this vase to Stuart Glass who were known to have patented a "threading machine" to apply this raise trails to a glass body.
My vase is a nice larger size measuring 7 inches in height. The rim at the top has a diameter of just under 5 inches.
It is in good antique condition with no damages. It is certainly quite stunning on display.
It is a bulbous shape with undulated out and in along the body shape. It has also been created with shallow wide ribs around the sides of the body - so the side are not smooth but have curved angular sections.
The surface is then covered all over with a trailed glass decoration from top to bottom and with a feathered pattern on the rib sections.
The trails are not part of the glass - as you might find on Stevens and Williams vases where the trailed glass is inside the clear body and not applied later. It has a nice ground and polished pontil mark on the base - which is also common on early 20th Century Stuart pieces. The emerald moss agate green colour over clear glass is also distinctive to Stuart & Sons.
The vase has a certain delicacy to it - so it will have to be carefully packed up inside double boxes and padded out. This will be with Parcelforce24 and it will be applied to your order at the checkout. It will be in the region of £10 (depending on recent price hikes on posting charges by couriers).