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Your Price: $ 19.60
 Item Number: 1222 |
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Manufacturer: Coalport China
A lovely demitasse cup and saucer set made by Coalport, England as part of their Kings Ware line in the Canton pattern. We are making available in this listing 1 cup & saucer set. You will also see separately listed for sale another cup and saucer set and an extra single demitasse cup (with no matching saucer). We are listing this one cup and saucer set here separately from the other set because it has a bit of damage. All of these pieces came out of the same home of a relative, who had received them years ago from another relative. All pieces are marked on the underside bases with the Coalport Porcelain Works crown and the words, "Coalport, England, A.D. 1750., Kings Ware, Canton." Based on this mark, these pieces were made between about 1891 and 1920. The Coalport Company, which is in Shropshire, England, is now part of the Wedgwood Group of china manufacture.
While referred to as china, these pieces are not porcelain as they are not translucent. They are pottery pieces or may be what is referred to as soft paste pieces, we are not sure. The base pottery color is white, appearing a bit off-white rather than a bright white. They have a lovely intricate black line pattern with hand-painted multi-colored highlights in red, green, blue and yellow and a hand-painted light brown line trim on the outer edge of the saucer and on the top rim and handle of the cup. The design interweaves flowers and leaves with a geometric motif including a Japanese pagoda-style building. This oriental-reminiscent style is often seen on these Victorian ceramic pieces, which are also referred to as transferware and Aesthetic Movement pieces. The transferware relates to the transferring of the intricate designs (the black line design here) onto the base china/ceramic pieces via a series of dots as one would do in printing, rather than hand-painting the full design. On the underside base of each piece there are some letters and numbers painted in a single color which would indicate to the manufacturer the individual who later applied the hand colored details.
Each antique cup and saucer sits about 2 1/2 inches in height. The round saucers flare upwards slightly from a smaller round base, with a top diameter of 4 inches and an underside base diameter of about 1 1/2 inches. The cup itself is about 2 inches in height, is straight-sided with a top opening diameter slightly wider than the base at 2 inches for the top and 1 7/8 inches for the base. Greatest width from the outside of the curved handle to the opposite side is about 2 3/4 inches. We have provided here 7 specific images of this cup and saucer set. Since we are limited as to how many images we can provide per listing, please also see the 8 images we've provided in our listing for the other cup and saucer set in order to see additional detailing of the pattern itself. Here we have included special images to provide close-ups of the slight damage to these pieces, as well as overall views and a close-up of the manufacturer mark. Please note that the white "hot spots" are lighting reflections from the camera on the glossy surfaces. This lighting also "blands" out the colors, making the base china appear a brighter white than it is in person and the colored highlighting less bold and dramatic than it is in person. These pieces look more lovely in person than we could show with our camera.
This cup and saucer set is in very nice overall condition even with slight damage. Both pieces have a good bit of crazing. The saucer has a small chip on the underside at the rim as shown in one image. This chip measures about 1/8 wide by 1/16 inch high. There are also two very tiny round paint flakes (one slightly larger than the other) in one black area near the topside rim. As with the other saucer we have for sale, there is also on the backside a small round spot to which the top glazing layer has not adhered. Our guess is that this may be where the piece was held by some implement when the glazing was applied, leaving this area unglazed and looking whiteish (you can see this in one image, this is not a chip). On the cup, at the outer bottom, there is a small dark spot as shown in the close-up image which looks like a very shallow surface flake or chip which has been filled in with some dark coloring. We can't tell if this happened at the time of manufacture or afterwards at some point. In size, this dark spot measures about 1/8 inch high x 1/16 inch wide. This cup also has what we would call five very very tiny paint flakes in the brown paint on the upper rim, a tiny flake/low chip on the curve of the lower base rim not far from the black spot shown in one image, and a little bit of other wear to the underside base rim on which the cup sits. There is a smeared/worn paint spot in the black petal of one flower. As with the other pieces for sale, there are stray black dots and some black smearing from the transfer process and some stray paint dots/spots from the hand-painting, including a small light black smudge on the interior of the cup. There are some stray small scratches on the underside of the saucer. While you should know all this is there, this really doesn't take away from the attractiveness of this demitasse cup and saucer set on display.
A neat addition to any collection of Victorian ceramics or Aesthetic Movement pieces, a collection of Coalport china or demitasse cups and saucers in general, or a collection of this exquisite Canton pattern. |
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