Good Afternoon All - Lookey what I got! ( 7366336105 ) My 30 year quest has finally come to an end. Some of you may remember that Diane TrulyFenton sold one of these in green color on eBay about 4 years ago, I forget how much it went for, but I couldn't afford it at the time. (I am getting this one from the sale of a $5 garage sale find, a pair of stainless steel boat propellers.) Diane's and mine, and the pink one RedMolly has listed, are the only three I have ever seen for sale in over 30 years of collecting green Sunflower! By the way, I now think I know why they are so rare, and it is such an obvious reason. How many other GLASS trivets from the Depression Glass era are there? Can anyone think of any? Of course there are several styles of Fire King PYREX trivets in clear, sapphire blue, milkglass, etc., but the key is PYREX. I bet Jeannette discovered that their developmental Sunflower glass trivets were prone to cracking in half when hot pots were placed on them. Their company lawyer probably said "No Way are we going to be sued for scalding mothers and children!" Does anyone know when pyrex became available? Would it be the 1930s when Jeannette was making their Sunflower Pattern, or later in the 1940s? Another question I am investigating, can the history of the known Sunflower trivets be traced back to Jeannett workers and their famlies, or does anyone have knowledge of them being commercially available? By the way, the three trivets I have seen all have the rib on the foot, the omnipresent cake plates have about half with rib and half without, a variation not reported in any glass books to my knowledge. Davephd Jeanette Pink Sunflower Trivet It's hard to believe that those few inches make such a difference between the cake plate and the trivet. But this is, indeed, the 7" trivet. It's beautiful, a pure pink, with the summery Jeannette Sunflower pattern. There is one tiny flaw, in that there is a 1/2 cm scratch on the top of the plate. I tried to get a picture of it, but I honestly cannot, (see the last picture below). It's incredibly small, incredibly shallow, and only visible if you tip the plate at a 75* angle in bright light. I'm very picky about the glass I buy, and I'm sure you are too. This is why I'm going to such lengths to tell you about this boo-boo. At this point, I'm sick of looking at this trivet. I hate it. I call it TDT, (aka That Damned Trivet) . I'm put the price down to $624.99, and that is the lowest you will ever find it, I can promise you that. There are only a few of these anywhere in the world, and this one is darn near flawless, I'm betting that you won't even notice the scratch unless you look for it as hard as I did when I was listing it. I'll even include the jeweler's loupe I used to find it. If you're a collector of glass, you know the scarcity of this piece, you know that it's hard to find, you know that it's rare, what do I have to do to get you to buy it? get it out of my house!!!! ARGH! RedMolly