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The last glass-cutting business in Catalonia creating unique glassware for Barcelona bars

Specialized glass cutting business was founded in 1952 but no generational succession threatens the trade's future

Toni Moya in his workshop
Toni Moya in his workshop / Emma Monrós Rosell
Emma Monrós Rosell

Emma Monrós Rosell | @emmamonros | Barcelona

November 3, 2024 11:35 AM

Barcelona boasts two different cocktail bars recently named Best Bar in the World by the prestigious World's 50 Best Bars ranking list: Sips, and Paradiso

But where does the unique glassware that forms such an integral part of the experience in these bars come from? The answer lies inside a little workshop next to Sagrada Família. 

Cristalerías Moya was founded in 1952 in Barcelona, and it started with the idea of cutting plain glasses to sell them to gift shops or similar stores.  

Toni Moya working on a cut-glass in his workshop in Barcelona
Toni Moya working on a cut-glass in his workshop in Barcelona / Emma Monrós Rosell

Then, "around the 1960s, my father wanted to differentiate himself and the business," Toni Moya, the current owner and only worker of the glassware company, tells Catalan News in an interview. 

To do so, Cristalerías Moya started to create specific elaborate cocktail glasses for the bars that were starting to take off in Barcelona at the time, such as Dry Martini or Up&Down. 

Toni has followed in his father's footsteps, managing the business for the past 30 years.  

Toni Moya working on a cut-glass in his workshop in Barcelona
Toni Moya working on a cut-glass in his workshop in Barcelona / Emma Monrós Rosell

Now he still creates unique glassware for bars in the Catalan capital, as well as in other parts of Spain. 

One of these particular orders was for the cocktail bar Belvedere. 

The owner of Belvedere, Ginés Pérez, previously had another bar called Zsa Zsa, whose logo was designed by Pere Torrent, a graphic designer also known as Peret.  

Toni Moya working on a cut-glass in his workshop in Barcelona
Toni Moya working on a cut-glass in his workshop in Barcelona / Emma Monrós Rosell

Ginés Pérez asked Toni Moya for a design where that logo could be converted into a cut-glass decoration. 

"They did not want the logo to just simply be put on a glass. So, from the art I drew certain lines of its silhouette and created an abstract cut-glass unique to this bar," Toni Moya explains. 

Two of the martini glasses Toni Moya personalizes for a cocktail bar in Barcelona
Two of the martini glasses Toni Moya personalizes for a cocktail bar in Barcelona / Emma Monrós Rosell

"I think it is a job where you have to have a lot of creativity," Toni states. 

"I always carry a notebook with me in case any ideas come up, so the next day I am able to get to the workshop and try it on a glass," he continues.  

Moya also fixes glassware and flower vases, both from private clients and luxury yachts that dock in Barcelona. 

"There are also antique shops that want to fix objects and give them a second chance at being used," Toni explains. 

A cut-glass creation by Toni Moya
A cut-glass creation by Toni Moya / Emma Monrós Rosell

Cristalerías Moya is also the last glass-cuter left in Catalonia and Spain, at least that he knows of: "Before all of us at the guild used to know each other, so you knew when one of them closed down because we informed one another. After the pandemic, the last two glass-cutters in Madrid closed." 

"The problem with this profession is that there is no generational succession. Glass-cutters have gotten older but fathers and sons have not continued the tradition, like I did in the past," he concluded. 

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