By the end of the seventeenth century glass-makers in Northern Europe had perfected the technique of creating a clear, colourless glass, using limestone as the principal ingredient. The range of decoration could then be broadened. Applied gold leaf decoration was also used on porcelains and enamels, as the pure white body provided an excellent contrast to the gilding. This type of ornament quickly became fashionable in courtly circles, but was used only rarely, and then for special commissions, as constant use and handling would rub off the gold, which had been applied directly onto the surface.
The cover of this goblet is ornamented with a scene of a boar and stag hunt with the royal coat of arms, while the bowl has, on one side, the royal monogram 'A.R.3' for Augustus III (1696-1763), Elector of Saxony and King of Poland beneath a crown flanked by cornucopia; on the other side is an inscription. The entire surface of the bowl is covered with foliate decoration interspersed with men and animals. Hunting was one of the favourite pursuits of the Saxon court and boars and deer survive to this day in Saxony and are hunted there.