AI Appraisal Estimate

AI-generated estimates · not official valuations

From the user

What was submitted

Photo and notes provided by the user — not generated by AI

Submitted item photo
Submitted photo · June 25, 2026

User's notes

Blown glass small elephant figurine

AI analysis below

AI appraisal

AI analysis & estimate

AI-Generated · Verify before acting

Everything below is generated by AI for informational purposes only. AI can make mistakes — the AI may misidentify items or misattribute them (artist, maker, brand, designer, origin, era). This is not an official valuation and should not be used for insurance, sale, tax, estate, legal, or lending purposes — or any decision requiring a certified appraisal. It is not an authoritative claim about any person, brand, or rights holder — do not share or rely on it as a factual statement about a third party. Always consult qualified professionals before making financial decisions.

Note

This analysis also relies on unverified notes provided by the user, which may be incomplete or inaccurate and could affect the result.

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AI Identification

·Not independently authenticated·Verify before acting

Art glass elephant figurine in Murano-style

Art Glass

AI Estimated Value

·Not an official valuation·Verify before acting

$15-$45

As of June 25, 2026

AI Item Analysis

·AI can make mistakes·Verify before acting
This diminutive sculpture appears to be a hand-crafted art glass figurine of an elephant, measuring a few inches in length based on adjacent objects. The object features a clear glass exterior with a vibrant turquoise glass core or casing that forms the body. The head and trunk are rendered in clear glass, with the trunk shown in an upward sweep. Small applied dots of dark glass, likely black or deep brown, create the eyes. The ears are large, translucent, and slightly textured, consistent with torch-worked or lamp-worked glass techniques. The four legs are also clear, ending in small blue accents at the feet. The owner identifies this as a blown glass small elephant figurine, which is consistent with its appearance, though the technique may specifically be lampworking (shaping glass under a torch). No maker's marks, signatures, or labels are visible in the provided image, making a definitive attribution to a specific studio or artist impossible. The aesthetic is stylistically consistent with 20th-century Murano glass figurines or similar decorative novelties. The glass appears to be in good condition with high clarity and no obvious chips or cracks visible on the surface.

AI Appraisal Report

·AI can make mistakes·Verify before acting
Based on my visual analysis of the provided image, this is a hand-formed art glass figurine of an elephant, likely created using lampworking or torch-working techniques. The piece features a clear glass body with a turquoise internal casing and applied dark glass eyes. The aesthetics are stylistically consistent with mid-to-late 20th-century decorative glass novelties often associated with Murano, Italy, or similar workshops in Asia and Eastern Europe. Based on what I can see, the glass appears to be in good condition with high clarity. However, I cannot verify from a photo if there are micro-fractures, internal stress lines, or subtle surface scratches that would necessitate a physical inspection. The owner identifies this as a blown glass elephant; while I cannot confirm a specific maker due to the absence of visible marks or labels, the current market for unattributed glass miniatures of this type remains stable but modest. The $15-$45 estimate reflects the value for a high-quality decorative souvenir if assumed to be a modern Murano-style or boutique art glass piece. Because no signature is present, I am treating the origin as a hypothesis only. If this piece were found to bear a documented signature from a renowned furnace such as Seguso or Barbini, the value could increase significantly. Conversely, if it is a mass-produced contemporary import, the value would likely fall at the lower end of the range. To confirm its origin, an in-person examination by a glass specialist and any available provenance documentation would be required. Without such verification, it is valued as an attractive, unattributed decorative object.

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