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Welcome to Porcelain Madness, a decorative annex to [http://MysticTeaRoomcom The Mystic Tea Room].
Welcome to Porcelain Madness, a decorative annex to [http://MysticTeaRoomcom The Mystic Tea Room], where every piece of chinaware tells a story.


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File:Jackson-Sample-Edward-Don-and-Co-Butterpat-Brown-1939.jpg|TEXT
File:Spritzdekor-blue-plums-cake-plate-germany.jpg|File:Spritzdekor-blue-plums-cake-plate-germany.jpg "Spritdekor" is German for "airbrushed' -- and this is a German porcelain spritzdekor cake plate fitted into a nickel-plated holder with handles. The image, in shades of indigo blue, depicts two leafy branches of Damson Plums in full fruit. I bought this cake plate on eBay years ago, and it came all the way from Germany. It is very nearly identical to a cake plate that my German-Jewish grandmother Ida had in her home.


File:Barbecue-Inn-Waikiki-Butter-Pat-Hawaii-Territory-1930’s.jpg|A small but mighty piece of restaurant ware from my collection. It is a butterpat from the Barbecue Inn in Waikiki, Hawaii Territory, made in the mid-1930s. The lettering is just amateurish enough to make me cringe, but the intention to hit the ultra-moderne-deco mark is so sincere that i am charmed. The Barbecue Inn was founded sometime after 1900 by Seihichi Shikata (1884-1931), born in Yokohama, Japan, and his wife Tsune Shikata (- 1932), born in Yamaguchi, Japan. When they died, the restaurant was carried on by their son Joseph Kiyoshi "Joe" Shikata (1906-1992), born in Waipahu, Hawaii. I think this butterpat dates from the era of the early proprietorship of Joe Shikata, circa 1932 - 1939. A 1933 advertisement lists the "Barbecue Inn at 2015 Kalakaua Ave., K. [Kiyoshi] Shikata, Mgr., Phone 91981."
File:Barbecue-Inn-Waikiki-Butter-Pat-Hawaii-Territory-1930’s.jpg|A small but mighty piece of restaurant ware from my collection. It is a butterpat from the Barbecue Inn in Waikiki, Hawaii Territory, made in the mid-1930s. The lettering is just amateurish enough to make me cringe, but the intention to hit the ultra-moderne-deco mark is so sincere that i am charmed. The Barbecue Inn was founded sometime after 1900 by Seihichi Shikata (1884-1931), born in Yokohama, Japan, and his wife Tsune Shikata (- 1932), born in Yamaguchi, Japan. When they died, the restaurant was carried on by their son Joseph Kiyoshi "Joe" Shikata (1906-1992), born in Waipahu, Hawaii. I think this butterpat dates from the era of the early proprietorship of Joe Shikata, circa 1932 - 1939. A 1933 advertisement lists the "Barbecue Inn at 2015 Kalakaua Ave., K. [Kiyoshi] Shikata, Mgr., Phone 91981."
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File:Warwick-B-and-W-Culbertson-Hills-Dessert-Plate-1930.jpg|Here's a beautiful 6-inch black-and-white desert plate made by Warwick for the Culbertson Hills Golf Course in Edinboro, Pennsylvania in 1930, the year it opened. The artwork and lettering are superb -- and the same uncredited artist also produced a gorgeous matching brochure for the country club. I love lettering, i love art deco line art, i love cumulus clouds in art (and these are amazing clouds!) ... but i don't love the Culbertson Hills Golf Course, which advertised that it was "open to the pubic under restrictions which the company imposes, of course" -- specifically, that membership was offered "only to Gentile people." In other words, no Jews were allowed -- and neither were African Americans. I have no idea if or when Culbertson Hills changed its racial and religious exclusion policies, but this beautiful plate remains a symbol of the finest commercial art of its time, in the service of the ugliest discrimination of its time.
File:Warwick-B-and-W-Culbertson-Hills-Dessert-Plate-1930.jpg|Here's a beautiful 6-inch black-and-white desert plate made by Warwick for the Culbertson Hills Golf Course in Edinboro, Pennsylvania in 1930, the year it opened. The artwork and lettering are superb -- and the same uncredited artist also produced a gorgeous matching brochure for the country club. I love lettering, i love art deco line art, i love cumulus clouds in art (and these are amazing clouds!) ... but i don't love the Culbertson Hills Golf Course, which advertised that it was "open to the pubic under restrictions which the company imposes, of course" -- specifically, that membership was offered "only to Gentile people." In other words, no Jews were allowed -- and neither were African Americans. I have no idea if or when Culbertson Hills changed its racial and religious exclusion policies, but this beautiful plate remains a symbol of the finest commercial art of its time, in the service of the ugliest discrimination of its time.


File:Green-Cross-Transferware-Waste-Bowl.jpg|Green Cross Transferware Bowl, made in England, 19th century
File:Green-Cross-Transferware-Waste-Bowl.jpg|Green Circle-in-Cross Transferware Bowl, made in England, 19th century. I bought this piece low-fire earthenware (not my usual semi-vitreous ware) because i am a fan of green-and-white ware (who isn't?) and the circle-in-cross is part of my own signature. Also, it is in the Aesthetic genre, wwhich i love. I suppose it to be late 19th century.


File:Carr-Vitrified-China-Ad-Plate.jpg|Carr Vitrified China Advertising Butterpat
File:Carr-Vitrified-China-Ad-Plate.jpg|Carr Vitrified China Advertising Butterpat. Sample butterpats were given away by restaurantware manufacturers during the inter0war period. This one is just a bit oversized for the usual butterpat, but it is certainly too small to qualify as a plate.


File:Grimwades-Pudding-Cooker-Lid.jpg|Grimwade's Pudding Cooker, Lid, made in England
File:Grimwades-Pudding-Cooker-Lid.jpg|Grimwade's Pudding Cooker, Lid, made in England.


File:Greenwood-Monkey-Dish.jpg|The Madness Has Begun!!!! Greenwood Monkey Dish
File:Greenwood-Monkey-Dish.jpg|A Greenwood Monkey Dish in the ever-popular and much copied leaf-and-ball design made by many pottery companies over the years, and sometimes known as "Richmond" or "Dixon" among dealers. This is a early example, with the Greenwood name impressed into the clay rather than applied as a underglaze decal.


File:Jackson-Sample-Edward-Don-and-Co-Butterpat-Brown-1939.jpg|The Madness Has Begun!!!! Jackson Vitrified China sample butterpat made for the restaurantware supplier Edward Don and Co., and distributed as a giveaway at the Midwest Hotel Expotion, March 1939.
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Revision as of 20:43, 10 November 2024

Welcome to Porcelain Madness, a decorative annex to The Mystic Tea Room, where every piece of chinaware tells a story.