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This magnificent English Staffordshire Transferware plate is a cut above the ordinary. The transfer is particularly fine and clear and the color is very strong. The scene is an Asian scene from an 18th Century travel book well known to collectors of fine early Transferware. dia. approx. 10 inches. Condition is excellent
A lovely staffordshire Transferware platter in the traditional blue glaze. The pattern is known as Madras, Blue mark on the back unreadable apart from a crown over a seal and the word Madras in blue glaze. Appears to be a small glaze roughness on one edge, possibly a restoration. 11x 9 inches
The good news is the color of the dish is wonderful. The bad news is there may be a repair on the front and there are knicks on the back. It's just so dawg gone pretty anyway.
8.5 x 6.5 inches
Fabulous Wedgwood majolica pitcher. This is the very rare milk jug size. Apart from minor spidering on the bottom, the piece is in spectacular condition. Deep torquoise interior
8 inches tall.
This Minton game pie dish is from the same mold as the majolica version which is fairly common. the yellow ware version of which this is an example is far rarer. While it does not have the Minton incised mark it does have the date mark for 1856. 12 inches long 7 inches wide. No flaws.
One of several lovely English shell work boxes I purchased from a major collector. Two shells are damaged, damages clearly evident in the picture. Dimensions 3.5 x 6 x 1.5 inches. This is a Victorian Antique and Not an 20th Century Asian copy.
This gigantic yellowware bowl is a whopping 14.5 inches wide and 7 inches tall. It came from an North Shore Long Island estate from a house dating to the 1860's. The bowl is probably from the 1890's. The outside seems to be perfect. The inside may have had a repair. the section in question is pictured.
Scots samplers preserved the Elizabethan flower motifs way after they were abandoned elsewhere, possibly because of the Jacobean associations of the stylized Rose motif. This one was executed by Elizabeth McAndrews and is circa 1830. Elizabeth also includes the Lord's Prayer and her genealogy in the design of the sampler
A very rare from of this pattern in exceptional condition. Marianne Marks in The Collector's Encyclopedia of majolica notes that the low form of this dish is rare. The modeling on this example is of better quality than normally found and may well be Fielding. 9 inch diameter plate on a 2 inch pedestal