Porcelain Madness: Difference between revisions

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File:Green-Cross-Transferware-Waste-Bowl.jpg|Green Circle-in-Cross Transferware Bowl, made in England, 19th century. I bought this piece of 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, which i love. I suppose it to be late 19th century.  
File:Green-Cross-Transferware-Waste-Bowl.jpg|Green Circle-in-Cross Transferware Bowl, made in England, 19th century. I bought this piece of 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, which i love. I suppose it to be late 19th century.  


File:Carr-Vitrified-China-Ad-Plate.jpg|Carr Vitrified China Advertising Butterpat. Sample butterpats were given away by restaurantware manufacturers during the inter-war period. This one is just a bit oversized for the usual butterpat, but it is certainly too small to qualify as a plate. It probably dates to the late 1930s.  
File:Carr-Vitrified-China-Ad-Plate.jpg|Carr Vitrified China advertising butterpat, made in Grafton, West Virginia. Sample butterpats were given away at trade shows by restaurantware manufacturers during the inter-war period. This one is just a bit oversized for the usual butterpat, but it is certainly too small to qualify as a plate. It probably dates to the late 1930s.  


File:Grimwades-Pudding-Cooker-Lid.jpg|Grimwade's Pudding Cooker, Lid, made in England.
File:Grimwades-Pudding-Cooker-Lid.jpg|Grimwade's Pudding Cooker, made in England. This is just the lid; the bottom bowl is also covered with lettering.  


File:Sterling-red-white-triangle-7-inch-plate-forum.jpg|Sometimes the decoration of a retaurant plate is so amateurish or abnormal that it makes me wonder what the pottery company's distributor or rep thought of it. But, as they say, "The customer is always right," so here we have one of many bizarre examples of how the Toffenetti / Triangle restaurant chain in Chicago liked their plates to look in the early 1930s. The pottery company is Sterling, and i'll bet that some of the factory's decorators went home to migraine-inducing nightmares after 8 hours of looking at this pattern!  
File:Sterling-red-white-triangle-7-inch-plate-forum.jpg|Sometimes the decoration of a retaurant plate is so amateurish or abnormal that it makes me wonder what the pottery company's distributor or rep thought of it. But, as they say, "The customer is always right," so here we have one of many bizarre examples of how the Toffenetti / Triangle restaurant chain in Chicago liked their plates to look in the early 1930s. The pottery company is Sterling, and i'll bet that some of the factory's decorators went home to migraine-inducing nightmares after 8 hours of looking at this pattern!  
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File:Queen-Anne-Lady-Lucky-Spades-Set-forum.jpg|A fine bone china tea cup and saucer set made by Shore & Coggins in the Lady Luck pattern at the Queen Anne Pottery in Staffordshire, England. The maker's mark dates it to between 1959 and 1966. The decoration is of playing cards, the front showing a royal flush, while on the back is a picture of the joker; there is also a joker on the inside of the cup. A small sandwich plate came with each set and the sets were made in four colourways: blue (hearts), green (diamonds), pink (clubs), and yellow (spades). I love this tea set for reading tea leaves, especially if the sitter has a question about luck! For hundreds of images of tea leaf reading sets, and instructions in tasseomancy, see our sister-site, [http://MysticTeaRoom.com The Mystic Tea Room].
File:Queen-Anne-Lady-Lucky-Spades-Set-forum.jpg|A fine bone china tea cup and saucer set made by Shore & Coggins in the Lady Luck pattern at the Queen Anne Pottery in Staffordshire, England. The maker's mark dates it to between 1959 and 1966. The decoration is of playing cards, the front showing a royal flush, while on the back is a picture of the joker; there is also a joker on the inside of the cup. A small sandwich plate came with each set and the sets were made in four colourways: blue (hearts), green (diamonds), pink (clubs), and yellow (spades). I love this tea set for reading tea leaves, especially if the sitter has a question about luck! For hundreds of images of tea leaf reading sets, and instructions in tasseomancy, see our sister-site, [http://MysticTeaRoom.com The Mystic Tea Room].


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 a early example, with the Greenwood name 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.


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 Exposition, March 1939.  
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 Exposition, March 1939.  
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Revision as of 19:34, 11 November 2024

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