Porcelain Madness: Difference between revisions

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File:Messingers-Plate-Stack.jpg|A soup plate with rose swags in green, marked for Messinger's Restaurant in Chicago, Illinois, made by Shenango, circa 1912-1922. Samuel P. Messinger was the proprietor and sales manager of this small chain of lunch rooms in Chicago and environs. Within it rests a small unmarked bread plate in the Marion pattern made by Mayer China, circa 1912 – 1935. Marion was a generic pattern of swags and swirls, but this plate, like many other Marion pieces, is back-stamped for the Horn & Hardart Automat restaurant chain based in New York City.
File:Messingers-Plate-Stack.jpg|A soup plate with rose swags in green, marked for Messinger's Restaurant in Chicago, Illinois, made by Shenango, circa 1912-1922. Samuel P. Messinger was the proprietor and sales manager of this small chain of lunch rooms in Chicago and environs. Within it rests a small unmarked bread plate in the Marion pattern made by Mayer China, circa 1912 – 1935. Marion was a generic pattern of swags and swirls, but this plate, like many other Marion pieces, is back-stamped for the Horn & Hardart Automat restaurant chain based in New York City.
File:Warwick-The-Claypool-Indianapolis-BW-Checkerboard-CS.jpg|A cup and saucer made for the Claypool Hotel in Indianapolis, Indiana, by the Warwick China Company in Wheeling, West Virginia. My husband nagasiva and i used to do freelance digital graphics and typesetting for a publishing company called Claypool Comics. When i found this set and an accompanying plate, i was pleased to see that the seller had two of these trios, so i bought both of them and passed the dupe set on to my old colleague Richard Howell, the chief editor, and a writer-artist, at Claypool.


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" among dealers. This is an early example, with the Greenwood backstamp impressed into the clay rather than applied as a underglaze decal.
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" among dealers. This is an early example, with the Greenwood backstamp impressed into the clay rather than applied as a underglaze decal.
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File:Grindley-Green-White-Pomeroy-3-Individual-Creamers.jpg|Three individual green-and-white creamers made by Grindley Hotel Ware in the Pomeroy pattern. Grindley's green glaze is a lighter and yellower shade than the standard forest green so well known through green-stripe ware. These creamers are not back-stamped, but they accompany a plate backstamped as Grindley Hotel Ware / Made in England / "Pomeroy" / Huntington Paper & China Co. / Huntington, West VA." The American importation of English semi-vitreous chinaware for both domestic and restaurant use was common at one time, but importing it to West Virginia does seem like carrying coals to Newcastle, given the number of potteries in Appalachia at the time.  
File:Grindley-Green-White-Pomeroy-3-Individual-Creamers.jpg|Three individual green-and-white creamers made by Grindley Hotel Ware in the Pomeroy pattern. Grindley's green glaze is a lighter and yellower shade than the standard forest green so well known through green-stripe ware. These creamers are not back-stamped, but they accompany a plate backstamped as Grindley Hotel Ware / Made in England / "Pomeroy" / Huntington Paper & China Co. / Huntington, West VA." The American importation of English semi-vitreous chinaware for both domestic and restaurant use was common at one time, but importing it to West Virginia does seem like carrying coals to Newcastle, given the number of potteries in Appalachia at the time.  
File:Warwick-The-Claypool-Indianapolis-BW-Checkerboard-CS.jpg|A cup and saucer made for the Claypool Hotel in Indianapolis, Indiana, by the Warwick China Company in Wheeling, West Virginia. My husband nagasiva and i used to do freelance digital graphics and typesetting for a publishing company called Claypool Comics. When i found this set and an accompanying plate, i was pleased to see that the seller had two of these trios, so i bought both of them and passed the dupe set on to my old colleague Richard Howell, the chief editor, and a writer-artist, at Claypool.


File:Mayer-G-and-L-red-green-white-c-and-s.jpg|A mystery cup and saucer from the early 20th century. It was made by the Mayer China company and dates to the era of hand-striping, probably around the 1910s to 1920s, but the "G & L" logo turns up no restaurants, tea rooms, academic institutions, churches, fraternal organizations, factories, fire departments, or other of the "usual suspects" who customarily had their own sets of restaurantware.  
File:Mayer-G-and-L-red-green-white-c-and-s.jpg|A mystery cup and saucer from the early 20th century. It was made by the Mayer China company and dates to the era of hand-striping, probably around the 1910s to 1920s, but the "G & L" logo turns up no restaurants, tea rooms, academic institutions, churches, fraternal organizations, factories, fire departments, or other of the "usual suspects" who customarily had their own sets of restaurantware.  

Revision as of 06:21, 23 June 2025

Welcome to Porcelain Madness, a decorative annex to The Mystic Tea Room, where every piece of chinaware tells a story. This site showcases beautiful top-marked restaurant chinaware from around 1900 through the 1960s. Some of the pieces are displayed as is if an art museum, others form a sequence of cozy photos featuring plated food. As this site grows, it may be split into several galleries. We shall see!

catherine yronwode
curator, historian, and docent
Porcelain Madness


Special thanks to my dear husband and creative partner nagasiva yronwode for illustrations, scans, and clean-ups.


And now, let the madness begin!