Yes, Corelle sells glasses, but the answer to “does Corelle make glasses” is a little more complex than a simple yes.

The glasses sold on the Corelle website today are manufactured by third-party partner brands, not produced using Corelle’s proprietary Vitrelle glass technology.

And if you own vintage Corelle dinnerware and want matching glasses, the current lineup almost certainly won’t help you.

This guide covers both realities: what Corelle sells now, what it used to sell, and exactly what to do depending on which problem you’re trying to solve.

Yes, Corelle Sells Glasses โ€” But Here’s the Important Detail

does corelle make glasses

Corelle does sell drinking glasses, but it does not manufacture them itself. The glasses available on Corelle.com are sourced from two partner brands, Ocean Glass and Lucaris Crystal, and sold through the Corelle storefront under a commercial partnership.

Corelle’s own manufacturing technology, Vitrelle, is a laminated three-layer glass process used exclusively for flat dinnerware: plates, bowls, and serving pieces. Vitrelle is not used to produce drinkware of any kind.

When you buy a glass from Corelle.com, you are buying an Ocean or Lucaris product, not a Corelle-manufactured one.

For a broader look at how Corelle performs compared to other tableware, see how Corelle compares to other dinnerware brands.

What Corelle’s current glasses are actually made of โ€” and who makes them

Ocean Glass is one of the world’s leading commercial glassware manufacturers, producing products used in restaurants, hotels, and homes across more than 100 countries.

Lucaris is Asia’s premier crystal glass producer, known for machine-blown lead-free crystal designed for everyday use.

Corelle describes the two brands on its website as complementary: Ocean for everyday casual drinkware, Lucaris for occasions requiring a more refined stem or clarity.

Neither brand uses Vitrelle technology; their products are conventional soda-lime glass (Ocean) or lead-free crystal (Lucaris), made using standard glassware manufacturing methods.

This distinction matters because the chip-resistance and near-indestructibility that Corelle plates are famous for do not transfer to these glasses.

Types of glasses sold on Corelle: tumblers, wine, and stemware

TypeCapacity RangeBrandMaterialDishwasher Safe
Everyday tumbler10โ€“18 ozOceanSoda-lime glassYes
Tall cooler / iced tea16โ€“20 ozOceanSoda-lime glassYes
Wine glass (stemmed)12โ€“17 ozOcean or LucarisGlass / lead-free crystalYes (Ocean); hand-wash recommended (Lucaris crystal)
Champagne flute7โ€“9 ozLucarisLead-free crystalHand-wash recommended
Juice glass7โ€“10 ozOceanSoda-lime glassYes
Rocks / old-fashioned10โ€“12 ozOceanSoda-lime glassYes

Corelle Coordinates โ€” The Original Matching Glassware (Now Discontinued)

For a long period of Corelle’s history, the brand did sell its own coordinating glasses โ€” branded under the Corelle Coordinates line โ€” designed specifically to match its dinnerware patterns.

These are entirely discontinued. For the complete guide to Corelle dinnerware patterns, including which patterns had corresponding glassware, see our dedicated pattern guide.

What Corelle Coordinates was โ€” matching glasses for every dinnerware pattern

Corelle Coordinates was a line of glass drinkware designed to share the same decorative motifs as Corelle’s patterned dinnerware, so that a full table setting โ€” plates, bowls, mugs, and glasses โ€” could carry a unified look.

The glasses were manufactured by Libbey Glass under license, not by Corelle’s own facilities. They came in several standardized sizes: 6 oz and 8 oz juice glasses with weighted or footed bases, 14 oz and 16 oz cooler tumblers, and, in some patterns, 12.5 oz rocks glasses.

The decoration โ€” ivy vines, hearts, sunflowers, blue cornflower motifs โ€” was applied to the outside of the glass to mirror the ink decoration on Corelle’s Vitrelle plates.

Popular patterns included Callaway (green ivy), Country Cottage (hearts and vines), Blue Cornflower, Sunsations (sunflowers), First of Spring, and Butterfly Gold.

For a deeper look at Corelle’s history as a glass brand and how Coordinates fit into it, see our brand history guide.

Why Corelle discontinued its Coordinates glassware line

Corelle’s official FAQ explains that the company discontinues patterns “when they lose popularity over time.” The Coordinates glasses were tied directly to specific dinnerware patterns.

When a pattern was retired, its matching glasses were retired with it. As Corelle shifted its strategy after being spun off from Corning in 1998 (and eventually becoming Corelle Brands, now owned by Anchor Hocking since 2024), the company moved away from maintaining a dedicated in-house glass accessories line and instead partnered with established drinkware manufacturers.

The result is the current Ocean and Lucaris arrangement: a broader, more commercially flexible drinkware offer, but one with no pattern-matching connection to any specific Corelle dinnerware design.

Do Corelle’s Current Glasses Match Its Dinnerware Patterns?

No, with very limited exceptions. The Ocean and Lucaris glasses sold on Corelle today are contemporary neutral designs, clear glass tumblers, stemless wine glasses, and crystal flutes with no decorative motifs that correspond to any Corelle dinnerware pattern, current or vintage.

If you own Blue Cornflower plates or Callaway ivy bowls and want glasses that carry the same imagery, the Corelle.com store will not solve that problem.

Why current Corelle glasses don’t match vintage dinnerware patterns

Ocean and Lucaris are partner brands selling through Corelle’s storefront, not manufacturers producing custom designs for Corelle’s pattern library.

Their product catalogs are designed independently of Corelle’s dinnerware pattern archive. Even current Corelle dinnerware patterns the ones still in active production, have no corresponding patterned glasses in the current lineup.

The matching glassware model was specific to the Coordinates era, and that era ended with the Coordinates discontinuation.

This is not widely explained anywhere in the current search results, which leaves vintage Corelle owners confused about why they cannot find pattern-matching glasses on a website that claims to sell Corelle drinkware.

What to do if you want glasses that match your Corelle pattern

  1. Search eBay with the exact pattern name plus “glasses” or “tumblers” โ€” for example, “Corelle Callaway glasses” or “Corelle Country Cottage 16 oz tumblers.” Listings for new-old-stock and used Coordinates glasses are consistently available, particularly for high-popularity patterns.
  2. Search Replacements.com under the Corning/Corelle category โ€” Replacements specializes in discontinued tableware and carries a wide inventory of Corelle Coordinates glasses, often in better-than-typical condition.
  3. Check Tarlton Place (tarltonplace.com) โ€” a specialist Corelle retailer that has operated for over 16 years and frequently carries new and vintage Corelle Coordinates glassware, including patterns like Callaway and Country Cottage.
  4. Contact Corelle directly to request a pattern re-run โ€” Corelle’s FAQ confirms the company has brought discontinued patterns back as limited editions in the past and actively invites customer feedback. Submit a request through their website.
  5. If the pattern is no longer available anywhere, choose a complementary neutral glass โ€” a clear glass tumbler or plain footed juice glass in the right capacity often pairs cleanly with patterned Corelle dinnerware without competing with the decoration.

Where to Buy Discontinued Corelle Glasses

The discontinued Corelle patterns guide covers the full plate and bowl landscape. For glasses specifically, the secondary market is your primary resource.

Best sources for vintage and new-old-stock Corelle glasses

SourceURLWhat to searchConditionPrice range (approx.)Tips
eBayebay.com“[Pattern name] Corelle glasses”New and used$15โ€“$60 per set of 4Filter by “Buy It Now” for consistent pricing; check seller feedback carefully
Replacements.comreplacements.comBrowse the Corning/Corelle categoryMostly used, well-graded$8โ€“$20 per glassBest for single replacement pieces; condition is graded accurately
Tarlton Placetarltonplace.comBrowse the “Corelle Glass” categoryNew and used$30โ€“$80 per setSpecialist dealer; carries NOS stock, others have sold out
Facebook Marketplacemarketplace“[Pattern name] Corelle”Used, condition varies$5โ€“$30 per setGood for local pickup; condition photos are critical
Etsyetsy.com“Vintage Corelle glasses”Used$20โ€“$60 per setBest for well-photographed single pieces and small sets

Which discontinued Corelle glass patterns are easiest to find today

  • Callaway (green ivy) is the most consistently available pattern, with multiple new-old-stock and used listings active on eBay and Tarlton Place at any given time in both 6 oz and 16 oz sizes.
  • Country Cottage (hearts and vines) is the second most available, with both straight-sided cooler tumblers and tapered versions appearing regularly, typically priced $50โ€“$60 per set of 4.
  • Sunsations (sunflowers and blue gingham) appear regularly in iced tea tumbler form, typically in sets of 4 at $30โ€“$50.
  • Blue Velvet Roses surfaces periodically in 16 oz cooler glass sets, often still in original packaging as new-old-stock.
  • First of Spring (white and blue floral) is available in footed 8-oz juice glass form, often found in smaller quantities.
  • Butterfly Gold vintage glasses appear occasionally but command higher prices due to collector interest in the pattern.

Are Corelle Glasses Chip-Resistant and Dishwasher Safe?

Current Corelle glasses, the Ocean and Lucaris products sold on Corelle, are not chip-resistant in the way Corelle’s Vitrelle dinnerware is.

They are conventional glassware that will chip and break under normal impact stress. That said, Ocean’s soda-lime glass products are dishwasher safe without restriction, and the line is manufactured to commercial-use standards, which does mean meaningful durability.

For detailed guidance on caring for Vitrelle dinnerware specifically, see how to care for Corelle Vitrelle glass.

Durability and care for current Corelle glasses (Ocean and Lucaris lines)

  • Ocean soda-lime glass tumblers and everyday glasses are fully dishwasher safe โ€” they can go in a standard household dishwasher on any cycle without special precautions.
  • Lucaris crystal stemware is dishwasher safe by specification, but Corelle recommends hand-washing crystal items to preserve clarity and prevent micro-scratching from detergent abrasion over time.
  • Thermal shock is a risk for all glass drinkware โ€” avoid pouring boiling water into a cold glass or placing room-temperature glass directly on a heated surface.
  • Neither Ocean nor Lucaris glasses share Vitrelle’s chip resistance โ€” expect standard glass breakage behavior; they are not designed to withstand the drops and impacts that Corelle dinnerware plates routinely survive.
  • Ocean’s commercial-grade manufacturing means the glasses are thicker and more impact-resistant than typical budget glassware, though this is a relative advantage, not a guarantee against breakage.

Durability of vintage Corelle Coordinates glasses โ€” what to know before buying used

  • Check for cloudiness before purchasing โ€” vintage glasses that have been through many dishwasher cycles can develop a permanent white haze (hard water mineral buildup or etching) that is not removable; always ask the seller for direct light photos.
  • Inspect the decoration for wear โ€” the patterned ink on Corelle Coordinates glasses was applied to the exterior surface and can scratch or fade with heavy use; look for photos showing the pattern area under good lighting.
  • Weighted-bottom glasses (common in the Callaway and Country Cottage lines) are more stable and less prone to tipping, which makes them a better choice for everyday use than lighter-bottomed vintage styles.
  • Check for chips at the rim โ€” rim chips are the most common damage point on older glassware and are essentially impossible to use safely; they also cannot be repaired.
  • Vintage Corelle Coordinates glasses carried only a one-year limited warranty (compared to the three-year warranty on Vitrelle dinnerware), which Corelle’s FAQ confirms. This reflects their status as an accessories line rather than a core product โ€” useful context when evaluating used condition, since any original warranty coverage is long expired.


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