Highly unlikely.
If this wine glass is made from common glass will crack.
crack
it will buse
the volume of water increased when the water is froze
A lot of glass does indeed crack and break when frozen. My suggestion is to play it safe and not store it in the freezer.
Ive seen this happen when dramatic changes in temperature happen e.g. its hot outside and you get cold water the window..
When you pour hot water into a glass bottle, it heats up the glass very quickly. This causes the glass to expand suddenly and the expansion is not uniform over the surface of the glass. The unequal expansion cracks the bottle.This will happen only if the temperature difference is quite high and the glass is weak.It is easier to crack a glass bottle by heating it (like in a dishwasher) and then cooling it immediately by placing it in or under a stream of cold water. Here, the sudden contraction causes the glass to crack.
Yes. For instance, you can chill a glass that you are going to use for a cold beverage. Warning: A closed glass container can explode and spread shattered glass all over the inside of your freezer if it is too full. Liquids expand when they freeze, and if there isn't enough room for them to expand inside the container, they will burst out of it. This can happen with other containers, too, but you won't see the wreckage that you get when it happens with glass. It's the kind of mistake you don't make more than once. Yes, but it is likely to crack if you fill it up with liquid and then seal it. NEVER stack two or more glasses in the freezer. Stacked glasses act just like a closed glass container when placed in the freezer and will break, even when there is nothing in them.
When warm water makes a cold glass crack it contracts.
solid
A surfboard should stay waterproof until you crack the glass. If you do crack the glass, then there are quick and cheap ways to fix it.
You can try taking it to a spelialist in antiques (maybe like an antigues shop?) or to an autcion to assess it for you and give you a rough estimate of price.