It's the first time I've seen tube construction like that, that hasn't involved a glass lathe.
When I was at UCL they got some of Fleming's original experimental thermionic diodes out of storage, and used modern parts to make a simple radio from one of them. It was some anniversary event. Those valves looked like they have been produced by an expert glass blower.
I'm curious about the original Fleming valves: were they constructed by adding an anode to a pre-existing commercial incandescent lamp?
Well, I was there in the early 70s, and all the staff who made those things had moved on....
If you look at the pictures at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleming_valve I think they work historically from left o right. Its quite possible the right hand picture is the one I saw being fired up. I remember it had a tubular anode like that one, The construction wasn't much different from early incandescent lamps. A nipple at the top seemed to be the point of evacuation, like early incandescent lamps, or most valves up to the end of their reign in the late 60s/early 70s. However, I don't think they modified an incandescent lamp. They made a custom envelope from scratch in a similar style. The bulbous shape was probably just the result of it being blown by hand.