buy miniature wine glasses

7.2K 690 609 Saved to Idea Box. /2013/06/diy-mini-terrarium-beach-inspired-with.htmlGot a question about this project?We specialize in fine personalized wine-related products! Custom glassware, engraved wood and marble, and cool wine items! See below to compare our glass decorating methods. With engraving, the design is permanently carved into the surface. With no minimum quantity and no setup fees, you can order as few as one glass! Perfect for small orders, or for bulk orders where the most elegant appearance is desired. We can print your custom design in a variety of colors! Our special UV type inks and flame pre-treatment make for extremely high durability. Ideal for larger orders at a lower cost, or where color is desired. SELECT FROM THE CATEGORY OPTIONS BELOW Engrave or print personalized messages on our 5 different types of wine glasses. Choose from three different styles of champagne flutes to customize an order. Personalize marble or terra cotta bottle coolers with any engraving that you like!

Our peppermills and wine bottle stands can be customized with any design. Ranging from corkscrewsand racks to cleaning supplies, we have it all! Wine-themed t-shirts, ties, aprons, and even baby clothes are offered here! Fun wine-related items from charms and gift bags, to candles, books and more. See Us In Action , we have multiple decorating options to achieve the look you want. We offer sandblasted engraving, screen printing, and even laser engraving for wood and marble. To learn more about our premium decorating methods, please click on a button below! Our ordering process is easy, and production times are fast! We offer full flexibility with designs, and we can incorporate artwork into any setup....use our art, or provide your own! Everything we make is fully customizable. , click on the button below. Spring is just around the corner and that means warmer weather, sunshine and new drink recipes!TipsThe best wine glass is the one in which wine tastes best to you.

Wine in a plastic cup on vacation always tastes delicious, and the tumblers at our favorite Italian place are just fine with that big carafe of rustic red wine.
buy wine away ukIt’s also true, though, that an elegant, comfortable and well-designed glass can make the experience of wine that much more pleasant.
buy best port wineAnd there’s good news here: There has never been a wider selection of good stemware available at affordable prices.
best under counter wine cooler For almost a decade now, our everyday glass has been Spiegelau “Vino Grande” Burgundy, which is so comfortable to us that it seems like an old shoe. Everybody needs new shoes from time to time, though, so we decided it was time to conduct a broad search to find a new everyday glass.

We shopped in person and online. While there are many different kinds of glasses for many different kinds of wine — flutes for sparklers, small glasses for dessert wine and some boast that they deliver specific wines best to specific taste buds and so on — everyone needs a good, solid, everyday glass to use for both reds and whites without thinking about it. You know: the kind of stemware you just reflexively pick up when you come home after a long day. That’s what we were looking for in this tasting. Here were our parameters as we searched: – Twenty ounces or more. We like large bowls in which our small pour of wine, whether red or white, has plenty of room to breathe and we can swish and swirl to our hearts’ content. We eliminated any glass that was less than 20 ounces or, online, didn’t reveal the size.We want to see our wine. In addition, thin glass is better than thick glass because we like to taste wine instead of glass and thick stemware can get heavy. – Long stem so we can hold it comfortably.

Those stemless tumblers we see at restaurants sometimes are fun as a change of pace, but we wouldn’t use them as everyday glasses. – Slight inward curve at the top. This focuses the aromas. – $15 or less. In fact, almost all of the glasses we liked were $12.50 or less, and many were less than $10. We don’t want to spend too much on our everyday glasses because then we don’t have to worry about breaking them; the angst would make using them less pleasurable. With those fences around our choices, we ended up with 25 different glasses. We bought them at places as disparate as Wal-Mart, Target and Sur la Table. In the past, we have bought some lovely stemware at Costco, but we haven’t seen special glasses there in some time and didn’t see any when we were searching this time. A number of glasses we picked up are from the various Riedel lines. Riedel is the big name in fine glasses and now it has all sorts of different, well-crafted lines at various price points.

A fine everyday glass, to us, is like great movie music. It doesn’t demand attention on its own but enhances the mood and action at every moment. It’s a very personal issue of how it feels in our hands and how it delivers the smells and tastes of the wine. We want a glass to be both sensual and unfussy, which can be a difficult trick. We placed all 25 glasses on the table and studied them. It’s amazing how different yet similar they were, truly an outstanding cornucopia of wine glasses. We quickly eliminated 14 from our competition. There wasn’t anything dramatically wrong with any of them, but we found some too heavy and thick; some too narrow (so tastes and smells got trapped); some too wide (so tastes and smells got away from us) and some simply boring. Some teetered on stems so thin and tall that they frightened us. We also eliminated a glass from Schott Zwiesel called “Tritan Diva Burgundy,” even though we both liked it. We thought with its particularly long stem that it felt simply too big and grand for everyday use, not to mention that six of them would pretty much fill our entire kitchen.

Still, we thought they’d be fun glasses to use when we have company and they’d be great with very big, young reds that needed plenty of air. They simply seemed a bit overwhelming for everyday use. We then spent several days using the remaining 11 glasses with a variety of red and white wines. We wanted something that felt comfortable to us, with nice balance, some elegance and which added to our enjoyment of the wine. All of that is highly personal — as personal as wine itself — so others might have chosen differently. We’re happy to say that our five favorites came from four different producers and five different stores. Our favorites, and the reasons we liked them, are listed in the attached index. Having used all of them now for a few weeks, we can tell you we’re quite fond of all of them and happy to have them as part of our household. A nice set of stemware is always a good gift — for novices or experts, for people who have few glasses in the house or many.

As wine lovers, we can assure you that we can never have enough everyday glasses. But don’t wait for someone to give you glassware. Our guess is that most wine lovers out there — like us — use their everyday glasses for years, until they break them. We’d urge you to spend some time this weekend buying a new set of everyday glasses for yourself. Just because they are a little bit different, they will make your wine-drinking experience a little bit fresher, a little bit more pleasurable, a little bit more fun. And all that for the price of one good bottle of wine. The Dow Jones Everyday Wine Glass Index In a test of everyday wine glasses that cost $15 or less and would be good for both reds and whites, these were our favorites. We have listed the price we paid and where we got them. Some of the glasses might be available at other places, and prices vary. ) on this list because it has been our everyday glass for almost a decade and we were looking for something new. It’s still an outstanding glass and we’d certainly recommend it.

The Riedel company owns Spiegelau. We bought all of these online except the Target glasses, which we bought at a store. Schott Zwiesel ‘Tritan Cru Classic’ Bordeaux.Somewhat unusual shape, something like an egg, means that everything tasted a little bit new and different to us. “This feels great, comfortable in my hand,” Dottie said. It’s deceptive: It’s big yet it doesn’t feel too big. All wines seemed a little bit more special in this glass. Great for swirling and sniffing. Crate & Barrel ‘Elite’ Chardonnay.Not quite as thin and elegant as the others, but generous, well-designed and clearly durable. The shape and feel reminded Dottie of restaurants in Italy, which is certainly a good thing. It’s also the only glass on this list that we could buy by the individual stem instead of a set. Robert Mondavi by Waterford Bordeaux. Looks very much like the Tritan above, but a little taller and, to us, just a tad too heavy compared to it, but, still, a real winner.

“Wow, this is such an interesting glass,” John said, and Dottie said, “This looks like it’s built for anything you could pour into it.” Wine swirls beautifully in it and opens up so nicely. (, at a much higher price.) Envision a classic wine glass and this looks like it — elegant, symmetrical and tall. Lovely glass that doesn’t call attention to itself and lets wine show well. “So comfortable and easy,” Dottie said. “It’s sort of second nature — like home.” After our tasting, as we were researching the “Vivant” glass, we discovered the identical “Vivendi” Bordeaux glass made by Nachtmann, another division of Riedel. (A spokeswoman for Riedel confirmed it is the same glass.) Pretty, beveled stem, which often we don’t like — too fussy — but this one is understated. Nicely big at the bottom, with a good curve at the top that helps aromas concentrate well. This article was adapted from a Tastings column by Dorothy J. Gaiter and John Brecher published in October 2009.