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Vintage tableware

shindeco

A-List Customer
Messages
377
Location
Vancouver (the one north of M.K.)
Yaaaay!!!! I finally got dinner plates for my set!! I've been collecting this pattern for almost 10 years now and the dinner plates were the hardest to find. Now I can have a dinner party.

dinnerware.jpg


(The pattern is called "Balmoral" by Alfred Meakin; first introduced in 1937. Silver is Rogers "Paris" pattern (1931). The wine glasses were my grandmothers and the fish knives and forks are something else I collect.)
 

shindeco

A-List Customer
Messages
377
Location
Vancouver (the one north of M.K.)
Scotrace - yes, it definitely gets used.

yachtsilverswan - I actually did know of Replacements but thanks for the heads up. It's a great service they offer, in't it? I got most of my stuff off e-bay because it's sometimes cheaper, but not always! I got a big box of serving pieces at auction. Stumbling on that was quite exciting!
 

Flitcraft

One Too Many
Messages
1,037
Wow! Pretty cool table set.
Always glad to hear it when someone completes a collection like that and then actually gets to use it!
 

Naama

Practically Family
Messages
667
Location
Vienna
Uuuuuu! They look gorgeous! I would be afraid of breaking them, handel them with care!

Naama
 

jkath

New in Town
Messages
46
Location
Southern CA
Your collection is devine! I love to use my old serving pieces as much as possible! There's no fun in having wonderful items if you never get them out of the cupboard! Have you ever posted to ebay's "want it now" forum for your pattern? Just a thought.
 

Alan Eardley

One Too Many
Messages
1,500
Location
Midlands, UK
English ceramics

Shindeco

My wife is in the pottery business - used to design tableware for Royal Albert and Royal Doulton near where your Alfred Meaking set was made. Now she restores damaged porcelain. She can often find pieces of a set that are otherwise unobtainable, if you need to replace broken items.

Alan
 

shindeco

A-List Customer
Messages
377
Location
Vancouver (the one north of M.K.)
Alan Eardley said:
Shindeco

My wife is in the pottery business - used to design tableware for Royal Albert and Royal Doulton near where your Alfred Meaking set was made. Now she restores damaged porcelain. She can often find pieces of a set that are otherwise unobtainable, if you need to replace broken items.

Alan

Alan
Thanks!! What a great resource! (I've always wanted the teapot and have never even seen one...)

Murray
 

scotrace

Head Bartender
Staff member
Messages
14,392
Location
Small Town Ohio, USA
Hotel Silver

Anyone collect it?
I'd like to find a decent set of plate flatware at a good price for every day use. Also some of the big water pitchers, sugar bowls, coffee servers, etc., are pretty neat.
Or china and servwear from passenger trains.
 

Braxton36

One of the Regulars
Messages
166
Location
Deep South, USA
Hotel silver

Scotrace - I don't see hotel silver as being widely collected. It can often be picked up at auctions and flea markets for very little. Look for that marked Meridien, Quadruple Plate or even "hotel silver" on the bottom. It's often very heavy and better plated than other silver plate as it was designed to withstand heavy use/abuse. At home we have a few very heavy oval covers that you would associate with room service but these are so large they would really have been used to cover a duck or some other large entree in a dining room setting. They are from an old local hotel long since burned down.

Often the flatware is marked with the hotel's name or monogram on the front but finding a whole set would be difficult as the few stray pieces that migrated out were usually purloined in pocketbooks. I have several dozen demitasse spoons apparently smuggled out of the Plaza in NYC by a great aunt who must have had many, many evening meals there. These were found in a box with glass swizzle sticks from what seemed to be every 1930's/40's bar in Manhattan. Gee... maybe she was a hooker... hmmm.
 

JoeNiblick

One of the Regulars
Messages
280
Location
Alaska
Hotel Silver!

Ah-ha, I see other people are trying to find it, too! Martha Stewart's Catalog for Living had some nice reproductions available before they shut down. I've been searching eBay and elsewhere for a set of silver-plate cake stands. I can't seem to find exactly what I'm looking for... Which is frustrating because it used to be available!

As a side note, there used to be so many great items in that catalog. I wonder if they'll ever open up shop again.

BVWjDMwBWkKGrHgoOKi4EjlLm3Y5BKSCvJL.jpg


Here's an image from the old catalog.
 

BinkieBaumont

Rude Once Too Often
shindeco said:
Yaaaay!!!! I finally got dinner plates for my set!! I've been collecting this pattern for almost 10 years now and the dinner plates were the hardest to find. Now I can have a dinner party.

dinnerware.jpg


(The pattern is called "Balmoral" by Alfred Meakin; first introduced in 1937. Silver is Rogers "Paris" pattern (1931). The wine glasses were my grandmothers and the fish knives and forks are something else I collect.)

"I love Alfred Meakin designs, I was told once that any design with the deep "Sapphire" blue is very good quality. I love Meakins "Princess" design I have seen it in both "Acid" green and "Blue" with silver
lucky2a.jpg




This is in "Tango Orange"
 

JerseyMutt

New in Town
Messages
26
Location
Sumter, SC (courtesy of Uncle Sam)
shindeco said:
Yaaaay!!!! I finally got dinner plates for my set!! I've been collecting this pattern for almost 10 years now and the dinner plates were the hardest to find. Now I can have a dinner party.

dinnerware.jpg


(The pattern is called "Balmoral" by Alfred Meakin; first introduced in 1937. Silver is Rogers "Paris" pattern (1931). The wine glasses were my grandmothers and the fish knives and forks are something else I collect.)

That is a gorgeous collection. And in such fine condition too.
 

JoeNiblick

One of the Regulars
Messages
280
Location
Alaska
New Additions

I've been searching for YEARS to figure out where I could get this creamy Wedgwood pattern. The Martha Stewart Catalog just called it "Queen's Ware."

MSWedgwood2.png


I even went as far as emailing Wedgwood, and that got me NO WHERE! The pattern is in the same shape as Drabware, but it's made from a lighter clay.

MSWedgwood3.png


Finally, after a random Google search (which had previously been fruitless), I found out the pattern is really called "Traditional." I was able to purchase the beginnings of a set from replacements.com, and then a few months later (and after checking back frequently), they received a stock of the coupe cups and saucers I wanted (there's also a tulip-shaped cup I didn't like as well... Probably because it's not what they had in the catalog, and after so many years, it was burned in my brain). Anyway, I'm happy to say my set is now complete!

MSWedgwood.png



And on an unrelated note (but related to more Martha Stewart catalog stuff I wished I had...), I found four small hotel silver compotes on eBay...

Picture1.png


Mine are from the Four Seasons hotel, which makes them even better than some reproduction!
 

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