Naming patterns in glass very often runs into one or more problems because of country of origin, type of construction, and usage. Americans rarely describe glass as the English do; real cut glass (always handmade) is rarely described the same as the cheaper version in pressed or blown-molded glass; the gaffers at the furnace do not call a "pattern" or a form by the same names as the company advertising which promotes it to potential customers. I hazard a guess yours are English case bottles (usually square, boxed in a rack for traveling). You might find some proof by studying English glass literature (including company catalogues). In England the design in your first 2 pictures might be called Hobnail, as Europeans know hobnails as large tacks with 6 or 8-sided heads which are hammered into the bottoms of rock climbing boots to keep one from slipping. Note the case bottles have 8-sided buttons as part of their decoration. In America, hobnail has come to signify a surface covered by any kind of bumps. The "pattern" your case bottles have is somewhat similar to a very common pattern seen in the U.S. called "Daisy and Button" in pressed glass tableware. But the genteel cut glass industry referred to it as "Russian cut". How cut glass bottles are made: a heavy blob of molten glass would be blown into a mold to get the size and shape; when anealed and cooled, the cutter would rough-sketch the desired pattern with grease pencil, then roughing out the basic design with coarse wheels, then lighter detals with finer wheels. Although the copper-wheel method described works well for 2-dimensional "engraving", your case bottles have nice 3-dimensional relief which would have required the use of a series of stone wheels followed by buffing all over with a rouge or pumice. You really need to find some English and American books on cut glass and study how they are similar but can often be told apart by styles & workmanship. Unfortunately the English glass collectors have not thought that cut glass warranted any attention until about the last 2 decades, so while Americans have collected ABC ("American Brilliant Cut") period pieces since WWII, the Brits have only recently started to take seriously any glass newer than 1815 as it was considered too commercial and pedestrian. For starters see Jane Hollingworth, "Collecting Decanters" (1980) and Derek Davis, "English Bottles & Decanters 1650-1900" (1972) both of which compact the 19thC. into a few last pages. Then see if you can get ahold of newer English books that start to detail this lost chapter in fine glassmaking.