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Glass trademarks and brands

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Gorilla Glass
trademark for an alkali-aluminosilicate sheet glass
Venetian glass
glassmaking tradition from Venice, Italy
Pyrex
thumb|A PYREX 1-quart [[measuring cup manufactured after 1940, featuring graduations in United States customary units]]
AGC
Japanese manufacturing company
Bohemia crystal
Potash lime glass
Baccarat
manufacturer of fine crystal glassware located in Baccarat, France
Nippon Sheet Glass
Japanese glass manufacturing company
cranberry glass
red-colored glass made by adding gold to molten glass
Q3041495
thumb|Gigogne glass Duralex is a French tempered glass tableware and kitchenware manufacturer located in La Chapelle-Saint-Mesmin in Loiret, France. Using a technique developed in the 1930s by Saint-Gobain, moulded glass is heated to 600 degrees Celsius then cooled very quickly, giving it twice the impact resistance of normal glass.
Waterford Crystal
manufacturer of crystal
Arc Holdings
French manufacturer and distributor of household goods
Tiffany glass
varied types of glass developed at the Tiffany Studios in New York
Val Saint Lambert
Belgian glassware manufacturer
Lalique
Lalique is a French luxury glassmaker, founded by glassmaker and jeweller René Lalique in 1888. Lalique produced glass art, including perfume bottles, vases, and hood ornaments during the early twentieth century. Following the death of René, Lalique transitioned to producing lead glass (crystal) works during the 1950s while under the direction of René's son, Marc Lalique. In 2010, Lalique was purchased by a Swiss company named Art & Fragrance SA, now known as Lalique Group SA.
Zerodur
thumb|300px|Opening of the European Extremely Large Telescope|ELT secondary mirror Zerodur blank mold containing the glass at first annealing at the [[Schott AG 4-meter blank annealing facility in Mainz, Germany.]] Zerodur is a lithium-aluminosilicate glass-ceramic manufactured by Schott AG. Zerodur has a near zero coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE), and is used for high-precision applications in telescope optics, microlithography machines and inertial navigation systems.
Dragontrail
Dragontrail is an alkali-aluminosilicate sheet glass manufactured by AGC Inc. It is engineered for a combination of thinness, lightness and damage-resistance, similarly to Corning's proprietary Gorilla Glass. The material's primary properties are its strength, allowing thin glass without fragility; its high scratch resistance; and its hardness with a Vickers hardness test rating of 595 to 673.
Vycor
Vycor is the brand name of Corning's high-silica, high-temperature glass. It provides very high thermal shock resistance. Vycor is approximately 96% silica and 4% boron trioxide, but unlike pure fused silica, it can be readily manufactured in a variety of shapes. Vycor can be subject to prolonged usage at 900 °C.
reagent bottle
laboratory storage container
Wood's glass
filter allows ultraviolet light to pass
Superfest
thumb|Branded Superfest glass Superfest, also called CV-Glas or Ceverit until 1980, was a brand of drinking glasses in the GDR. Due to being made of chemically strengthened glass, they were notably strong. The Superfest glasses were produced between 1980 and 1990 in what was then state-owned Sachsenglas Schwepnitz.
Sitall
Sitall (also known as Sitall CO-115M or Astrositall) is a crystalline glass-ceramic with ultra-low coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE). It was originally manufactured in the former Soviet Union and was used in the making of primary mirrors for the Russian Maksutov telescopes. It has a CTE of only 0 ± 1.5 °C−1 in the temperature range −60 to 60 °C, placing it in a small group of transparent materials with low CTE such as Vycor, Zerodur, CerVit and fused quartz.
Ohara Corporation
Japanese manufacturing group of glass and glass-ceramics