Small Candy Bowl – EAPC
This Small Candy Dish Bowl is the bottom of the Small Candy Dish. It is approximately the same size as the Dip Bowl, but has a smooth rim while the Dip Bowl’s rim is scalloped.
Early American Prescut (EAPC) Bowls of all sizes, including scalloped rim and smooth rim.
This Small Candy Dish Bowl is the bottom of the Small Candy Dish. It is approximately the same size as the Dip Bowl, but has a smooth rim while the Dip Bowl’s rim is scalloped.
Strangely, the EAPC Punch Bowl never got its own listing in an Anchor Hocking Catalog – at least through 1979. I haven’t found any catalogs later than 1979 yet. It was only offered in sets: the Entertainment Group, Punch Set, and Punch Set with Stand.
The elusive Paneled Bowl is a beaut! It’s gorgeous. It has flare! It is definitely and eye-catcher. Be prepared to spend a pretty penny to buy one online. If you’re lucky you might find one in the wild.
Side dishes, vegetables, small salads, and more fit perfectly in the Oval Bowl. Anchor Hocking only produced this for a few years, so it’s not as common as some of the other EAPC bowls.
The Medium Serving Bowl is the perfect size for many side dishes on your dinner table. It was sold individually and in the Dessert Set and Hostess Set.
The Large Serving Bowl is one of the four items that launched Anchor Hocking’s Early American Prescut line in its Anchorglass 1960-61 Catalog.
This bowl in Crystal is part of the Large Candy Dish and was not sold separately. However, you may find it in other colors without a lid. As far as I can tell, the colored bowls were produced without a lid.
You can use a Gondola, sometimes called a Banana Split Bowl, as tableware or decorware. I often use mine to hold goat cheese, Ritz crackers, cookies, carrots, and more.
These sparkling Dip Bowls are ideal for salads, fruit, cereal, desserts, candy, and other uses. Anchor Hocking seemed to consider them quite versatile, too, because they included them in several sets.
This bowl is the bottom of the Sugar. However, it’s also a nice-sized bowl for layered deserts, parfait, pudding, etc. So you might want to collect more than one to use as dinnerware.
This EAPC Small Serving Bowl is almost the same size as the bottom of the Large Candy Bowl Dish but has a scalloped rim instead of the smooth rim of the Large Candy Bowl. It’s a very useful serving piece and also an excellent size for a side salad in a place setting.
These handy little Dessert Bowls, so named because they’re part of the Dessert Set, are quite scarce and hard to find. Accordingly, they can be a little pricey when you do find them online.
The 3-Toed Bowl, aka Bon Bon, is a handy dish. You can use it as a serving piece, as dinnerware, or for home decor.
This 5.25″ EAPC Shallow Bowl has a smooth rim. The clear bowls were often used by hairdressers to mix color and bleach. Perhaps that is why the clear ones are so hard to find today.
Many EAPC Collectors were surprised – me included – to learn that the elusive Console Bowl was none other than the Punch Bowl Base. Just turn it over and voilĂ you have a Console Bowl!