


Air Highball Glass
"Air" series
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Mouth Blown & Hand Cut Irish Crystal
Effortlessly refined, the Air Highball Glass brings together hand-blown Irish crystal and modern design. A thoughtful single frosted panel creates a soft interplay of light and texture, transforming everyday serves into a moment to savor. Designed with a tall, minimal silhouette and balanced weight, it’s perfect for serving cocktails, spritzes, or sparkling water. Both luxury barware and modern sculpture, the Air Highball Glass makes an exceptional gift for the cocktail enthusiast or as a housewarming present.
Designer: Scholten & Baijings
Product code: ELD1
This piece is a part of the Air Collection from the Elements series designed by Scholten & Baijings for J. Hill’s Standard.
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Air Collection
The Air Collection reflects the most ethereal of elements. Defined by contrast, each piece balances brilliant crystal clarity with softly diffused panels, achieved through meticulous sandblasting techniques that evoke the hazy drift of sea mist.
Inspired by Ireland’s sea-bound landscape—often veiled in ghostly fog—the collection captures the elusive beauty of the half-seen: the way light bends, blurs, and transforms in mist. This distinctive series includes wine glasses, highballs, whiskey tumblers, champagne and cocktail glasses, and a tall, glass-stoppered decanter—perfect for hosting, gifting, or elevating the everyday.
Let the ethereal take shape. Explore the Air Collection.
Mix & Match
Elements Family
By Scholten & Baijings

Elements is a family of mouth-blown, hand-cut crystal glassware designed by Scholten & Baijings and produced exclusively by J. Hill’s Standard in Waterford, Ireland.
Inspired by the interplay of natural forces and the stark, unforgettable Irish landscape, Elements captures the moment when sea mist drifts inland and clings to the thorny branches of the blackthorn tree.
The Elements Family comprises two related yet contrasting collections: Air, defined by fine sandblasted texture, and Thorn, distinguished by bold, angular cuts. Both express a rhythmic interplay of surfaces—graphic markings of varying depth that evoke fog, shadow, and thorn—creating a layered, tactile landscape in crystal.
Each piece stands on its own yet invites collecting, to be matched or mixed, restrained or exuberant. Together, they form a visual symphony — striking individually, and even more expressive in concert.
















