Porcelain Madness: Difference between revisions

From Porcelain Madness
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(→‎And now, let the madness begin!: caption for Goldblatt's)
Line 16: Line 16:
<gallery widths="450px" heights="450px" perrow="2" align="left; cellspacing=8px; cellpadding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;">
<gallery widths="450px" heights="450px" perrow="2" align="left; cellspacing=8px; cellpadding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;">


File:Goldblatts-orange-white-butterpat.jpg |A butterpat in the Aristocrat design of panels and flower baskets, executed in a distinctive pumpkin orange colour by Sterling China of Wellsville, Ohio, for the Goldblatt's department store chain headquartered in Chicago, Illinois. Sterling China was founded in 1917 and closed in 2003. Goldblatt's was founded in 1914, and in 1919 it moved to a 10-story building on State Street which included a restaurant inside. By the 1970s the chain had expanded to include 47 stores throughout the Midwest, most or all of which included in-house restaurants. Alas, like many other department store chains, Goldblatt's failed to adopt the concept of online shopping, and thus it was liquidated in 2003. The exact manufacturing date of this particular butterpat is not indicated by a backstamp, but my guess is that the pattern was made from 1919 onward.
File:Goldblatts-orange-white-butterpat.jpg |A butterpat in the Aristocrat design of panels and flower baskets, executed in a distinctive pumpkin orange colour by Sterling China of Wellsville, Ohio, for the Goldblatt's department store chain headquartered in Chicago, Illinois. Sterling China was founded in 1917 and closed in 2003. Goldblatt's was founded in 1914, and in 1919 it moved to a 10-story building on State Street which included a restaurant inside. By the 1970s the chain had expanded to include 47 stores throughout the Midwest, most or all of which included in-house restaurants. Alas, like many other department store chains, Goldblatt's failed to adopt the concept of online shopping, and thus it was liquidated in 2003. The exact manufacturing date of this particular butterpat is not indicated by a backstamp, but my guess is that it dates to the 1930s.


File:Breakfast-with-Glendale-Restaurantware.jpg|Breakfast in bed served on antique restaurant ware -- "Glendale" by O.P.Co. Syracuse. This morning's Glendale Special features Coffee with Milk, Apples from our Forestville orchard that were gathered by my loving husband nagasiva yronwode, a half a dozen California Almonds, an assortment of vitamins, and a Zante Currant filled Crawford's Garibaldi Biscuit that came all the way from England!
File:Breakfast-with-Glendale-Restaurantware.jpg|Breakfast in bed served on antique restaurant ware -- "Glendale" by O.P.Co. Syracuse. This morning's Glendale Special features Coffee with Milk, Apples from our Forestville orchard that were gathered by my loving husband nagasiva yronwode, a half a dozen California Almonds, an assortment of vitamins, and a Zante Currant filled Crawford's Garibaldi Biscuit that came all the way from England!

Revision as of 01:35, 8 January 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!