Here we have 9 Normandy or Calvados bottles. These bottles are immediately recognizable by their heavy robustness, long necks, well tooled thick V string rims and thick walled bodies and glass blowpipe pontil scars. They come in two distinct colours too, a darkish olive green and a brighter bottle ? green. The shorter body type like 2.49 are rarer and I think earlier. These bottles are difficult to date accurately and to my knowledge they do not appear in any 18th century iconography. I would say between 1720 at the earliest, to 1750. Some have appeared in archaeological digs in Canada and have been tentatively dated from 1730-50. 2.49 was found in a cellar in Rennes in 1991 along with a similar half bottle, an English mallet and an English squat cylinder. The others were found in cellars in Normandy and Perche.
The top of the necks and pontils vary between 3 and 3.5cm in diameter.
Note the elongated bubble in the neck of 2.143.
2.49 -- Weight 1130gms -- Height 28.3cm -- Width 11.7cm -- Capacity 885cc.
2.135- Weight 1305gms -- Height 31cm -- Width 11.5cm -- Capacity 975cc.
2.121- Weight 1135gms -- Height 28.6cm -- Width 11.7cm -- Capacity 990cc.
2.143- Weight 1170gms -- Height 28cm -- Width 11.2cm -- Capacity 960cc.
2.140. Weight 960gms - Height 30cm. - Width 11cm. - Capacity 970cc.
2.13. Weight 1010gms - Height 30cm - Width 10.8cm - Capacity 955cc
2.16. Weight 1030gms - Height 29.1cm - Width 11.1cm - Capacity 975cc.
2.153. Weight 820 gms - Height 29cm - Width 11.1 - Capacity 915 cc.
2.161. Weight 1010gms - Height 29.5 - Width 11.4 - Capacity 975cc.
Averages- Weight 1063gms - Height 29.3 - Width 11.3 - Capacity 955cc
It is interesting to see that the dimensions and capacity of the bottles vary little, however the weight of glass used varies considerably.