Posts Tagged ‘transferware’

Marquis de Lafayette jug, c.1830

Friday, March 12th, 2010

English pottery jug made for export to the American market in 1830, with copper lustre glaze and bat printed black transfer decoration on a canary yellow ground. Attributed to Enoch Wood, an earthenware manufacturer at the Fountain Place Works, Burslem, UK.

The transfer decoration depicts Marquis de Lafayette (1757-1834), the French aristocrat and military officer who served under George Washington in the American Revolutionary War.

The front of the jug has a cartouche containing a generic fruit still life.

This impressive jug measures 7-1/2″ high.

The other side shows General Cornwallis resigning his sword to Washington at Yorktown, Oct. 19, 1781.

A tinsmith created this substantial metal handle and bands which replaces the broken pottery handle. Fragments of the original handle remain on the jug, revealing the reddish brown color of the clay.

This similar jug in pristine condition shows what the original, more elaborate handle looked like before it broke off.

Photo courtesy of Live Auctioneers

English sugar bowl, c.1820

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

An English pottery sugar bowl with lush floral blue & white underglaze transfer decoration made by Davenport in the first quarter of the 1800s.

Sugar bowl measures 3-1/2″ high and 5-1/2″ wide.

Marked on the bottom with an impressed DAVENPORT and anchor. At some point the matching lid was broken or lost and was replaced with an unassuming carved wood lid. The knob, made from a nail, is even less assuming.

This small piece of paper, the size of a fortune cookie fortune, was found inside with this faded inscription: “Great Great Grandmother Pate – 1770”.

This complete sugar bowl from the same period, still maintains its original matching lid.

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Photo courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art