18th century

1700 to 1799.

  • Large Antique English Pottery Whieldon Charger Tortoiseshell Glaze 18th Century

    Large Antique English Pottery Whieldon Charger Tortoiseshell Glaze 18th Century

    $1,400.00

    This massive Whieldon creamware charger has an immediate physical authority.
    Thrown with a wide, flat well and a generous rim, the form allows the dramatic surface to take full advantage of its size.
    The creamware body is finished in a rich tortoiseshell palette, with iron-brown sponging over a warm cream ground and boldly applied green and blue splashes that pool and feather naturally in the firing.
    Despite its mid-18th-century origins, the charger’s freely applied colored glazes give it a surprisingly modern visual presence.
    The reverse retains strong kiln character, with firing marks entirely consistent with mid-18th-century English creamware pottery.
    Tortoiseshell chargers of this scale are increasingly scarce, and this example stands out for both its size, design, and excellent state of preservation.

    Dimensions: 15.25 inches diameter

    Condition: Excellent

    Decoration: Tortoiseshell glaze with green and blue splashed decoration
    Material: Creamware (Whieldon pottery)
    Style: Mid-18th-century Whieldon style
    Origin: England
    Date: Circa 1765
    Notable Details:
    Massive charger with commanding scale
    Classic Whieldon tortoiseshell palette
    Freely applied colored glazes with strong visual impact

  • Pair Antique Blue and White Delft Ginger Jars Hand Painted Netherlands C. 1790

    Pair Antique Blue and White Delft Ginger Jars Hand Painted Netherlands C. 1790

    $2,300.00

    Made in the late 18th century, this pair of blue and white Delft jars has an elegant presence.
    The smooth ovoid bodies rise to a strong, stepped neck and a wide, projecting flange that adds architectural detail to the silhouettes.
    Each jar is topped with a domed cover finished with a tiered knop finial banded in blue and white.
    The decoration is confidently hand-painted in deep cobalt blue, with lovely floral groupings, stylized landscape elements, and a drapery-like blue border at the shoulder that frames the scene and emphasizes the form of the jars.
    On the reverse, each jar features a butterfly
    The designs on the two jars were made to complement each other.
    Each has small individual details that make this a fascinating pair.

    Dimensions: 10.75″ tall x 4.75″ diameter at widest point x 3″ diameter at base

    Condition: Excellent, with small edge chips invisibly restored

    Decoration: Hand-painted blue and white landscape and floral motifs
    Material: Tin-glazed earthenware (Delft)
    Style: Traditional Delft style
    Origin: Netherlands
    Date: Circa 1790
    Notable Details:
    A true pair made to be together with closely matched form and decoration
    Hand-painted decoration with expressive cobalt brushwork
    Domed covers with simple knop finials

  • Large Salt Glazed Stoneware Pierced Dish, England, Circa 1760

    Large Salt Glazed Stoneware Pierced Dish, England, Circa 1760

    $1,280.00

    This beautiful pierced salt glazed stoneware dish was made in England circa 1760.
    The dish was molded with basketweave panels and raised rococo scrolls.
    It has eight lobes, each with pierced latticework.
    The central well has a geometric diaper pattern, framed by a raised circular border.
    The panels, the rococo scrolls, and the piercings are all arranged in a carefully balanced composition.
    The surface retains excellent definition, with light passing through the pierced sections and animating the sculptural relief.
    The precision of the piercing and the sharpness of the molded ornament create one of the most exceptional, ambitious, and technically demanding forms produced in eighteenth-century English salt glaze.
    Forms of this type were produced with the American colonial market in mind and are today studied and collected within the field of eighteenth-century Americana.
    An example of this model is preserved in the Colonial Williamsburg collections.
    It is illustrated on page 151 of Salt-Glazed Stoneware in Early America by J. Skerry and S. F. Hood.
    The authors note: ” the front of the pierced dish is press-molded with a variant of the basket-dot-diaper pattern, so favored in America for dinnerware, underscoring the close relationship between English ceramic production and colonial taste.”
    Pieces of this caliber were luxury wares in their own time and are today regarded as true icons of eighteenth-century Americana stoneware.

    Dimensions: 11.75 inches in diameter

    Condition: Excellent with a slight kiln burn on the underside only (see last image)

    Decoration: Press-molded relief with pierced latticework
    Material: Salt glazed stoneware
    Style: Mid-Georgian with Rococo influence
    Origin: England
    Date: Circa 1760
    Notable Details:
    Rare pierced form documented in the Colonial Williamsburg collections
    Variation of the Basket-dot-diaper pattern favored in American colonial markets
    Exceptional preservation of molded detail and piercing

  • Blue and White Worcester Porcelain Fluted Dish 18th Century Circa 1770

    Blue and White Worcester Porcelain Fluted Dish 18th Century Circa 1770

    $230.00

    This 1st Period Worcester porcelain fluted dish, was made circa 1775.
    It features a crisp, deep-blue transfer-printed design that combines pinecones, flowers, scrolling vines, and a distinctive persimmon motif.
    The transfer has a strong, even blue characteristic of the period’s best production.
    The central bouquet is full of movement as its blossoms and leaves extend organically across the fluted surface, that enhances the play of light across the surface.
    The scalloped border is framed with floral sprays that echo the richness of the interior pattern.
    Worcester’s transfer printing of this period captures remarkable clarity and tonal depth in the blue, giving the piece both visual strength and fine detail.
    The dish is a lovely example of the factory’s mature 18th-century blue-and-white production on soft paste porcelain.
    Naturalistic elements and rhythmic geometry meet in a harmonious balance.

    Dimensions: 7.75″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

    Material: Porcelain
    Style: Georgian Era
    Origin: England
    Date: Circa 1775

  • 2 Pairs of Wedgwood & Bentley Black Basalt Urns and Cassolette/Jars 18th Century

    2 Pairs of Wedgwood & Bentley Black Basalt Urns and Cassolette/Jars 18th Century

    $9,800.00

    This set of four black basalt masterpieces, made by Wedgwood & Bentley at their Etruria works around 1775, represents the height of 18th-century English neoclassical design.
    Each piece demonstrates the partnership’s unmatched command of proportion, sculptural relief, and material refinement.
    The two larger vases are sculpted in high relief with a lively frieze of bacchanalian boys—a classical theme evoking festivity and freedom from convention.
    Their cylindrical bodies rise from square bases, framed by elegant scroll handles and finished with domed lids topped by grooved finials.
    The precision of modeling and the depth of the relief are hallmarks of Wedgwood & Bentley’s finest work.
    The smaller pair, designed as cassolettes (both jars and candle holders), exemplifies versatility.
    The domed covers of the jars can be inverted to serve as candle holders, showcasing a practical and decorative innovation of the period.
    Smooth ovoid bodies taper gracefully to square bases, while rope-twist handles and draped garlands add a delicate rhythm to the otherwise restrained forms.
    A band of crisp fluting encircles each shoulder, unifying the set through architectural harmony.
    All four pieces are executed in Wedgwood’s black basalt—a dense, fine-grained stoneware polished to a subtle sheen.
    Its velvety surface captures light with quiet depth, enhancing the relief’s sculptural clarity.
    This “black Egyptian ware,” as Josiah Wedgwood described it, was among his proudest inventions. In a letter to Bentley, Wedgwood said, “The Black is sterling and will last forever.”
    Marked WEDGWOOD & BENTLEY ETRURIA (used 1769–1780), the group embodies the intellectual elegance and disciplined artistry that defined the early neoclassical movement in English ceramics.

    Larger vases: 11.5″ tall × 5.25″ across handles × 3.25″ square base

    Cassolettes: 8.75″ tall × 3.5″ diameter × 5″ across handles

    Condition: Excellent

    Decoration: Black basalt with applied reliefs of bacchanalian figures and garland ornament.
    Material: Fine-grained black basalt stoneware.
    Style: English Neoclassical.
    Origin: Etruria, Staffordshire, England.
    Date: Circa 1775.
    Notable Details:
    • Rare complete set of four Wedgwood & Bentley black basalt urns and cassolettes
    • Larger pair with bacchanalian boys in deep sculptural relief
    • Smaller pair with reversible lids converting to candle holders
    • Distinctive rope-twist and fluted architectural detailing
    • Marked WEDGWOOD & BENTLEY ETRURIA (1769–1780)
    • Exemplary of the partnership’s mastery in neoclassical form and proportion
    • Material praised by Josiah Wedgwood himself as “sterling and everlasting”

  • Large Antique Blue and White Dutch Delft Vase Hand Painted 18th Century Ca. 1770

    Large Antique Blue and White Dutch Delft Vase Hand Painted 18th Century Ca. 1770

    $1,600.00

    This hand-painted Dutch Delft vase, made circa 1770, is a beautiful example of 18th-century tin-glazed earthenware in blue and white.
    Rising to more than eighteen inches, the vase has a sculptural silhouette that moves gracefully from its octagonal base to the rounded body, slender neck, and round upper section, ending in a flared notched rim.
    The decoration is richly painted with songbirds among flowering branches, with small blossoms scattered throughout to create a light mille-fleurs effect.
    The clarity of the cobalt blue, the confident brushwork, and the interplay of large and small motifs give the vase a lively visual rhythm.
    Around the shoulders, a band of lappets articulates the change in contour, while a ring of stiff leaves encircles the neck, adding definition and upward movement.
    The tin-glazed surface has a soft sheen typical of fine Delftware, and the underside shows rough marks where the vase was pried from the kiln floor after firing, an authentic detail of 18th-century production.

    Condition: Excellent, with very small edge chips invisibly restored.

    Dimensions: 18.25″ tall × 8.5″ diameter × 6.5″ base

    Decoration: Hand-painted songbirds and flowers with scattered blossoms, stiff leaves at the neck, lappets at the shoulders
    Material: Tin-glazed earthenware
    Style: 18th-century Dutch Delft, blue and white
    Origin: The Netherlands
    Date: Circa 1770
    Notable Details:
    Beautiful hand-painted decoration with birds and florals
    Tall sculptural form with octagonal base and rounded contours
    Deep cobalt palette with confident, fluid brushwork
    Stiff-leaf neck band and lappet shoulder motif
    Underside retains rough kiln-release marks from firing

  • Antique Blue and White Delft Jar Hand Painted 18th Century Netherlands Ca. 1780

    Antique Blue and White Delft Jar Hand Painted 18th Century Netherlands Ca. 1780

    $1,700.00

    This fine 18th-century Dutch Delft jar was hand painted in blue and white circa 1780.
    The octagonal body is decorated with a swirling cobalt blue floral design.
    The painter’s confident brushwork alternates deep cobalt blue with soft, translucent shading, creating a lively sense of movement across the surface.
    The jar’s shoulder features a band of acanthus leaf decoration.
    At the top, a lively foo dog finial adds a delightful detail.
    The jar is in excellent condition, with a luminous glaze and richly preserved decoration.

    Dimensions: 20.5″ tall x 9″ across the widest point x 5.5″ across the base

    Condition: Excellent

    Decoration: Hand-painted cobalt floral and foliate design on an octagonal body with matching lid
    Material: Tin-glazed earthenware (Delftware)
    Style: 18th Century Dutch Delft, inspired by Chinese export porcelain
    Origin: Netherlands
    Date: Circa 1780

     

  • Salt-Glazed Solid Agateware Cat with Mouse England Mid-18th C. 1745-1760

    Salt-Glazed Solid Agateware Cat with Mouse England Mid-18th C. 1745-1760

    $2,300.00

    A seated cat with upright ears and grounded paws, holding a small brown mouse in its mouth.
    The figure is formed from two press-molded halves, joined vertically along the spine, with the seam carefully smoothed but faintly visible.
    The marbling of the body flows in soft waves of buff, grey, and brown clay, the darker layers derived from an iron-rich brown marl that fires through the body to a deep chestnut tone.
    The mouse, modeled separately in that brown clay, fuses seamlessly into the main body at the mouth, its form distinct beneath a continuous glaze.
    A delicate cobalt-blue wash is brushed across the ears, shoulders, and body.
    Under magnification, the blue is visible beneath the glaze, slightly diffused into it — clear evidence of pre-firing cobalt staining rather than post-firing enamel.
    In the 1740s–1750s, potters around Fenton and Shelton perfected agateware by laminating clays of contrasting colors, an innovation traceable to John Astbury and refined by Thomas Whieldon.
    Decorative animal figures served as tests of technical control: the joining of laminated clays, color migration under salt vapor, and shrinkage in complex forms. The cat-and-mouse theme combined domestic humor with a nod to natural history—apt for display on a mantel flanking a mirror, where reflected light animated the marbling.
    The rhythmic flow of marbled strata across shoulders and haunches mimics the direction of fur, lending vitality.
    The restrained cobalt accents provide cool contrast to the warm iron tones, a color harmony characteristic of Whieldon’s palette.
    The modelling, neither naïve nor over-refined, aligns with other Staffordshire salt-glaze animals produced before 1760, when finer engine-turned wares supplanted press-molded novelty figures.
    Material & Technique: Salt-glazed stoneware composed of laminated buff, grey, and iron-bearing brown clays (“laid agate”).
    The mouse modeled separately in solid brown clay of the same iron-rich body, joined at the mouth before glazing.
    Body and mouse salt-glazed together in a single firing.
    Extra fine orange-peel texture typical of mid-18th-century salt-glaze kilns when using a saggar.
    Entire open underside glazed, indicating firing on refractory stilts or within a sagger rather than on a raw kiln shelf.
    Press-molded in two halves and luted vertically along the spine.

    Dimensions: Height 5.25 in (13.3 cm)

    Current Condition: Excellent, with minor chips restored to the tips of both ears, a tiny flake on the edge of one ear, and tiny chips at the tips of both mouse ears.

    Clay Composition: The alternating buff and brown laminations penetrate through the entire wall thickness, visible on the open inside of the body, proving genuine laid agate construction.
    The brown strata and the mouse share identical color and hardness, confirming that mid-18th-century Staffordshire iron marl is the pigmenting agent rather than a later-applied oxide.
    Further, very fine chips at the ends of the mouse’s ears indicate that the brown coloration is uniform throughout.
    Salt-glaze Texture: The surface exhibits uniform micro-pitting. Later imitation glazes lack this micro-cratering.
    The glaze is continuous and finely fused, exhibiting only the faintest granular texture visible under magnification.
    This smooth surface results from moderate sodium-vapor exposure within a protective sagger, a technique employed in Staffordshire kilns to preserve the clarity of agate marbling.
    Although lacking the coarse “orange-peel” found on heavier utilitarian wares, the microscopic pin-pitting and flow lines confirm a true salt-glazed surface rather than later imitation.
    Cobalt Wash: The translucent blue tone blooms through the glaze, proving sub-glaze cobalt oxide, a technique current at Whieldon’s Fenton Vivian works and nearby potteries in the 1750s.
    Press-Mold Join: The vertical seam corresponds precisely with known mold construction from Staffordshire animal figures c. 1745–60.
    References:
    1stDibs Antique English Saltglaze Agateware Cat Carrying a Mouse, (listed US $4,463.39).
    Burnap Collection, English Pottery 1675–1825, no. 362.
    Christie’s, London 2010, lot 82.
    Chipstone Foundation, Marbled Agateware: Techniques and Identification, 2005.
    John Howard Antiques, Antique English Saltglaze Agateware Cat Carrying a Mouse,
    Woolley & Wallis, Salisbury 2021 sale, lot 950.
    Henry Sandon, Staffordshire Pottery, 1970, pp. 52–53 (on blue staining and salt-glaze firing)

  • Set of 6 Pieces Antique English Creamware 18th & Early 19th Century w Brown Trim

    Set of 6 Pieces Antique English Creamware 18th & Early 19th Century w Brown Trim

    $730.00

    This rare six-piece set of antique English creamware, with elegant hand-painted brown trim, was made between the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
    The highlight of the group is a marked Wedgwood creamware basket with a matching stand, circa 1800, both of which are impressed with the Wedgwood mark.
    The basket features a pierced, arcaded border and delicate, upturned handles, while the stand complements it with matching details.
    Another exceptional piece is the leaf-shaped dish, circa 1785, featuring a rare paper label for Wynn Sayman, a well-respected 20th-century dealer in early English pottery, which adds provenance to its charm.
    Completing the set are two small round plates with brown trim, circa 1810, an oval dish with impressed basketweave design and pierced arcaded border, circa 1810, and a shell-shaped dish by Spode, circa 1810, marked on the reverse.
    Together, this collection highlights the variety, craftsmanship, and elegance of English creamware.

    Condition: Excellent
    Date: Circa 1785–1810
    Origin: England

    Dimensions:
    Wedgwood basket (circa 1800, impressed Wedgwood): 9″ long x 5″ wide x 4″ tall
    Wedgwood stand (circa 1800, impressed Wedgwood): 9.25″ long x 8″ wide
    Leaf-shaped dish (circa 1785, Wynn Sayman label): 5.5″ long x 5″ wide
    Shell-shaped dish by Spode (circa 1810, marked): 9.25″ long x 8″ wide
    Oval dish (circa 1810, basketweave with arcaded border): approx. 9″ long x 8″ wide

  • Pair Blue and White Large Hand Painted Dutch Delft Plates The Axe Circa 1780

    Pair Blue and White Large Hand Painted Dutch Delft Plates The Axe Circa 1780

    $1,400.00

    This pair of large Dutch Delft plates, traditionally referred to as chargers, was hand-painted at the renowned De Porceleyne Bijl (The Axe) factory in Delft, circa 1780.
    Each plate measures 12.25 inches in diameter and is centered with a carefully balanced composition depicting a basket overflowing with flowers, rendered with assurance and clarity in rich cobalt blue.
    The surrounding border alternates between scrolling floral sprays and diamond-patterned panels, creating a rhythmic frame that guides the eye across the surface.
    Warm ochre-painted rims provide contrast against the white tin-glazed ground, lending definition and visual depth while neatly enclosing the decoration.
    The pair remains in excellent condition and reflects the confident workmanship and refined decorative control associated with late 18th-century production at The Axe factory.
    Dimensions: 12.25 inches diameter
    Condition: Excellent
    Decoration: Hand-painted floral basket with alternating border panels
    Material: Delft tin-glazed earthenware
    Style: Dutch Delftware
    Origin: Netherlands, De Porceleyne Bijl (The Axe)
    Date: Circa 1780
    Notable Details:
    Produced at De Porceleyne Bijl (The Axe), active 1637–1803
    Strong cobalt blue painting on a white tin-glazed ground
    Ochre-painted rims provide warmth and visual framing
    Large-format plates traditionally called chargers
    Well-matched pair with balanced decoration and excellent preservation

  • Pair Blue & White Dutch Delft Plates Hand Painted De Porceleyne Claeuw Circa 1760

    Pair Blue & White Dutch Delft Plates Hand Painted De Porceleyne Claeuw Circa 1760

    $2,400.00

    This pair of large blue and white Dutch Delft plates, traditionally made as chargers, is hand-painted and marked by De Porceleyne Claeuw (The Claw) and was made in the Netherlands circa 1760.Each charger measures 14 inches in diameter and features a central urn overflowing with flowers, surrounded by concentric borders of scrolling vines and blossoms.
    The rich cobalt palette is complemented by lively brushwork with rhythmic energy.
    The lobed and barbed edges are painted dark blue, framing the composition beautifully.
    Impressive in both size and decoration, these chargers display the beauty and creativity associated with De Porceleyne Claeuw, one of Delft’s most celebrated factories.Dimensions: 14″ diameter
    Condition: Excellent
    Material: Delft tin-glazed earthenware
    Origin: Netherlands
    Date: Circa 1760 (De Porceleyne Claeuw active 1661–1840)

  • Pair Antique Barr Worcester Porcelain Plates Brown Grapes & Gold England 1790s

    Pair Antique Barr Worcester Porcelain Plates Brown Grapes & Gold England 1790s

    $380.00

    This pair of Barr Worcester porcelain plates was hand-painted at the Warmstry House factory on the River Severn in Worcester, England, between 1792 and 1803.
    Each plate features clusters of rich brown grapes framed by curling gold tendrils.
    The center of each plate is encircled by a ring of gold scrollwork surrounding a grape cluster.
    The border displays a repeating grape motif interspersed with gilt leaves.
    The scalloped rims are beautifully trimmed in gold.
    The surface of the plates has a molded fluted design, adding visual interest as light plays across them.
    The effect is fabulous!
    The warm tones of the brown enamel and gold create a rich contrast against the bright white porcelain, making them as visually appealing today as they were when first produced.

    Marks: Incised “B” for Barr Worcester

    Dimensions: 8″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

    Decoration: Hand-painted brown grapes with gilt tendrils, gilt leaves, and scrollwork on a fluted ground with scalloped, gilded rims
    Material: Porcelain
    Style: Neoclassical
    Origin: England
    Date: 1792–1803

  • Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Pitcher Hand Painted Circa 1770

    Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Pitcher Hand Painted Circa 1770

    $285.00

    This Chinese export porcelain pitcher was hand painted circa 1770.
    It captures a bit of elegance and whimsy in 18th-century Chinese export design.
    Known as a “sparrow beak” pitcher for the distinctive shape of its narrow spout, this petite vessel was prized for serving cream or sauces at European tea tables of the period.
    It is beautifully hand-painted in the famille verte palette, with lively brushwork depicting birds perched on flowering branches and a delicate butterfly hovering nearby.
    Rusty orange chrysanthemums, fresh green leaves, and touches of turquoise lend the piece both vibrancy and grace.

    Dimensions: 4″ tall x 4″ deep to the end of the handle x 2.75″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

  • Dutch Delft Blue and White Charger De Witte Starre Factory Circa 1770

    Dutch Delft Blue and White Charger De Witte Starre Factory Circa 1770

    $1,060.00

    This large Dutch Delft charger was hand-painted at the De Witte Starre* factory in Delft circa 1770.
    The cobalt blue decoration is arranged in petal-like panels radiating from a central roundel.
    Each panel is filled with abundant hand-painted floral motifs, including blossoming branches, tulips, and peonies.
    The border shows panels of blooms and patterned ornament, all meticulously executed in fluid brushwork.
    This is an especially fine example of De Witte Starre’s output during its peak period, distinguished by its elegant form and rich decoration.

    Marks: the reverse has the star mark of De Witte Starre
    Dimensions:13.75″
    Condition: Excellent. Minor glaze imperfections typical of 18th-century Delftware and small edge frits invisibly restored.
    Decoration: Blue and white hand-painted floral panels arranged in a radial petal design
    Material: Tin-glazed earthenware
    Style: Dutch Delft, Chinoiserie Influence
    Origin: Netherlands, Delft
    * De Witte Starre was founded in 1660 and closed in 1804.
    Date: Circa 1770

  • Antique English Creamware Reticulated Basket, England Circa 1790

    Antique English Creamware Reticulated Basket, England Circa 1790

    $730.00

    This English creamware basket was made circa 1790 and stands out for its exceptional quality.
    Thirty-six handmade openwork bands rise from the solid base, interlacing at the rim in an elegant rhythm of light and form.
    Each band was individually applied by hand, creating subtle irregularities that speak to the artistry of its Georgian-era origin.
    The glaze is pale, soft, and luminous, and the walls rise higher and more steeply than is typical, lending the piece a sense of sculptural presence.
    The proportions are generous, and the workmanship—particularly the precision of the pierced structure—is unusually fine.
    Baskets of this intricacy were among the most time-consuming forms to produce in creamware.
    Surviving examples are increasingly rare and prized for their quiet elegance and technical delicacy.

    Dimensions: 3″ tall x 9″ diameter across the top; 4.75″ diameter across the base

    Condition: Excellent

  • Antique Blue and White Chinese Export Porcelain Dish Hand Painted Circa 1760

    Antique Blue and White Chinese Export Porcelain Dish Hand Painted Circa 1760

    $280.00

    This Chinese Export porcelain dish was hand-painted in deep cobalt blue with beautiful floral decoration featuring peonies, a traditional symbol of prosperity and beauty.
    Made circa 1760, the porcelain body is a pale, almost translucent light blue that sets off the rich underglaze decoration.
    Much of the design—particularly the peony blooms—is defined by finely painted outlines filled with delicate cross-hatching, adding texture and visual depth to the surface.
    The central medallion and surrounding sprays show excellent brushwork and balance, characteristic of mid-18th-century Chinese porcelain made for export to Europe.
    The dish has a softly lobed edge and is bordered with a geometric fret pattern.

    Dimensions: 9″ diameter x 1.5″ deep

    Condition: Excellent

  • Six Chinese Export Porcelain Plates Hand Painted Famille Rose Circa 1770

    Six Chinese Export Porcelain Plates Hand Painted Famille Rose Circa 1770

    $1,100.00

    This exquisite set of six hand-painted Chinese Export porcelain plates, crafted circa 1770, showcases the elegant Famille Rose palette.
    Created for the European market each plate is decorated with richly detailed floral compositions in vibrant shades of pink, purple, red, green, and gilt.
    The group features several related designs that work together to enhance its visual appeal:
    – Two plates form a harmonious pair, each beautifully decorated with four pairs of cranes along the border—an auspicious symbol in Chinese art representing harmony, fidelity, and longevity.
    – A second two plates form another elegant pair, each boasting floral centers and stylish borders embellished with scattered flowers and sprays.
    – The top center plate showcases a bold central bouquet rising from cobalt-blue rockwork, reminiscent of the final plate but distinct in its absence of a garden fence.
    – The bottom center plate features a vibrant bouquet emerging from cobalt-blue rockwork, accompanied by a graceful garden fence and framed by a refined border of delicate floral sprigs.
    Together, these six plates create a visually captivating and harmonious ensemble, distinguished by variations in composition and border treatment.

    Dimensions: Each plate is approximately 8.9″ in diameter.

    Condition: Five Excellent, one with a 1.5″ professionally sealed hairline that is hard to see without a close-up (see images 7 and 8).

    Key Features:
    • Exquisite set of six hand-painted Chinese Export porcelain plates
    • Elegant Famille Rose palette with vibrant floral and botanical motifs
    • Includes a pair adorned with four pairs of cranes on the border, symbolizing longevity and harmony
    • Comprises a second floral pair with scattered sprig borders
    • One plate displays a striking central bouquet with rockwork (no fence)
    • Another plate presents a central bouquet, cobalt-blue rockwork, and a garden fence
    • Crafted for the European market during the Qing dynasty, circa 1770

  • Pair Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Plates Famille Rose Hand Painted Ca. 1770

    Pair Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Plates Famille Rose Hand Painted Ca. 1770

    $580.00

    These two Chinese Export porcelain plates were hand-painted in the Famille Rose palette circa 1770.
    Each plate offers its own exuberant interpretation of floral beauty, capturing the spirit of Qing dynasty porcelain made for the European market.
    Though they differ in border treatment and detail, they share a similar design, a lively palette, and a masterful balance of color and form.
    One plate features a radiant central bouquet rising from cobalt blue rocks, surrounded by delicate sprays of pink and red flowers and a garden fence.
    A ring of finely painted gilt spearheads encircles the scene, adding a sense of refinement and structure to the joyful composition.
    The second plate presents a looser, more lyrical rendering: blossoms seem to float across the surface, with vivid greens and soft washes of color lending a painterly, spontaneous character.
    Each plate is a beautiful example of the artistry and charm that made Chinese Export porcelain so prized.

    Dimensions: One plate measures 9″ diameter x 1″ deep; the other 8.75″ diameter x 1.5″ deep

    Condition: Excellent

    Key Features
    • Two Chinese Export porcelain plates, circa 1770
    • Hand-painted in the Famille Rose palette
    • Vivid floral scenes with cobalt rocks and gilt accents
    • One plate with spearhead border; the other more freely composed
    • Each composition is beautifully executed
    • Excellent condition with no restoration

  • Chinese Export Porcelain Blue and White Dish with Deer 18th Century Circa 1780

    Chinese Export Porcelain Blue and White Dish with Deer 18th Century Circa 1780

    $280.00

    This 18th-century Chinese export blue and white porcelain dish was hand-painted in underglaze blue, circa 1780.
    The whimsical central scene depicts two stylized deer beneath a blooming tree.
    The deer are rendered with charm and imagination, likely without reference to real animals.
    They stand on a flowering ground amidst lush foliage. Above them, three butterflies hover in flight.
    The border is filled with flowers. It forms a dense decorative band around the rim.
    The dish is beautifully composed.
    Dimensions: 9″ diameter x 1.75″ deep
    Condition: Excellent

    Decoration: Hand-painted deer, butterflies, floral ground, and wide peony border
    Material: Porcelain
    Style: Qing Dynasty Export Ware
    Origin: China
    Date: 18th Century circa 1770
    **Key Features**
    – Chinese export blue and white porcelain
    – Central scene with stylized deer and butterflies
    – Decorative border with scrolling peonies
    – Made in China for the European market
    – Excellent condition

  • Wedgwood 18th Century Creamware Plates Set of Three with Landscapes England

    Wedgwood 18th Century Creamware Plates Set of Three with Landscapes England

    $780.00

    This rare set of three creamware plates was made in England by Wedgwood in the 18th century, circa 1780.
    One plate retains a paper label for the “Josiah Wedgwood Jubilee Exhibition 1980, no. 33.1b, 1st Bank of the U.S.
    Each plate is decorated with a finely detailed black transfer-printed landscape by Sadler and Green, rendered in delicate monochrome. The rustic English countryside views are delightful, featuring cottages, ruins, and tree-lined paths.
    The shaped rims are bordered with elegant black enamel vine and berry motifs, unifying the trio with matching decorative style.
    These plates exemplify the neoclassical refinement and technical innovation of early Wedgwood wares.
    Ref: For an image and discussion, see The Dictionary of Wedgwood, p. 305, by R. Reilly and G. Savage, and 18th Century Wedgwood for Collectors and Connoisseurs, p. 27, by R. Reilly.
    The landscape scenes were printed by Sadler and Green, Liverpool-based pioneers who developed ceramic transfer printing in the 1750s.
    Their collaboration with Wedgwood brought fine engraving and mass production together for the first time, revolutionizing 18th-century decorative ceramics.
    Marks: The “WEDGWOOD” mark of the period.
    Dimensions: 10″ diameter
    Condition: Excellent

    Decoration: Black transfer landscapes by Sadler and Green; vine and berry borders
    Material: Creamware
    Style: Neoclassical
    Origin: England
    Date: Circa 1780
    Key Features:
    – Rare matched set of 18th-century Wedgwood creamware plates
    – Black transfer landscapes by Sadler and Green
    – Elegant black enamel vine border decoration
    – One plate with 1980 Josiah Wedgwood Jubilee Exhibition label
    – Published in two standard Wedgwood references
    – Features work by the pioneers of ceramic transfer printing

  • Antique Delft Charger Hand Painted at De Vergulde Bloempot 18th Century Ca. 1780

    Antique Delft Charger Hand Painted at De Vergulde Bloempot 18th Century Ca. 1780

    $1,100.00

    This antique Dutch Delft charger was hand-painted in the 18th century at De Vergulde Bloempot, one of the most esteemed Delftware factories of the period.
    It is marked on the reverse with the initials “B P,” identifying it as a work of this distinguished maker.
    The charger features a lovely symmetrical composition of stylized tulips, scrolling foliage, and elaborate foliate elements arranged in a radiant pattern.
    Painted in rich cobalt blue on a white tin-glazed ground, the decoration reflects the confident brushwork and refined aesthetic associated with high-end Delftware.
    The charger is finished with a charming molded pie crust rim, which adds a tactile and visually arresting edge to the design.

    Marks: The “B P” mark in underglaze blue used in the 18th century at De Vergulde Bloempot

    Dimensions: 13.75″ diameter x 2″ height

    Condition: Excellent

  • Pair of Chinese Export Famille Rose Plates Qianlong Era Circa 1750

    Pair of Chinese Export Famille Rose Plates Qianlong Era Circa 1750

    $1,200.00

    Made circa 1750, this beautiful pair of Chinese export porcelain plates is hand-painted in vibrant famille rose enamels.
    The central scene features a rooster standing proudly in a lush garden landscape, surrounded by blooming peonies, rockwork, and delicate foliage.
    The rooster, shown in profile, displays richly feathered plumage in tones of yellow, brown, and black, accented by a vivid red comb and elegantly arched tail feathers.
    In Chinese art, the rooster symbolizes courage, strength, vigilance, and the power to dispel evil spirits.
    The scene is framed by a narrow cell-pattern band, while the wide border is decorated with flowering branches of peonies and chrysanthemums, all painted in bright overglaze enamels of pink, green, blue, yellow, and turquoise.
    A fine iron-red line edges the rim.
    The vibrant palette and lively brushwork reflect the refined craftsmanship of mid-18th-century Chinese export porcelain.

    Dimensions: 9.5″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

  • Salt-Glazed Solid Agateware Cat with Candle Holder, Staffordshire, Mid-18th C. 1745-1760

    Salt-Glazed Solid Agateware Cat with Candle Holder, Staffordshire, Mid-18th C. 1745-1760

    $2,500.00

    This solid agateware cat was hand-crafted in Staffordshire, England, circa 1745-1760 from laminated salt-glazed stoneware.
    An exceptional example of 18th-century English ceramics, it combines the technical innovation of early stoneware with the charm and whimsy of regional folk art.
    A separately molded socket atop the cat’s head allows the figure to function as a candle holder.
    The cat was made by pressing and molding sheets of layered and stained clay—white ball clay, manganese-stained brown, and cobalt-stained blue—to produce a swirling marbled effect that runs throughout the form.
    Unlike surface slip decoration, this technique creates marbling through the entire body.
    A clear salt glaze adds brilliance and enhances the depth of the pattern.
    Cobalt blue highlights appear at the ears, neck, and across the figure’s body.
    The eyes are formed from a darker brown clay that gives the cat an expressive, alert expression.
    This is a rare and superb example of antique English agateware, a technically demanding and visually arresting ceramic technique pioneered in Staffordshire in the mid-18th century.
    Marks: The underside bears the red ink mark “78.79.7B,” indicating prior ownership by a collector or institution.
    Dimensions:
    5.5 in. tall × 3 in. deep × 2.5 in. wide
    Condition: Excellent; small chips to the tip of one ear and the top edge of the candle holder professionally restored
    Price: $2,500
    Key Features:
    • Material: Laminated salt-glazed stoneware
    • Decoration: Solid agate marbling from laminated, stained clays
    • Construction: Press-molded figure with luted candle socket
    • Glazing: Clear salt glaze enhances contrast and color depth
    • Style: English Folk Art / Whieldon style Agateware
    • Origin: Staffordshire, England
    • Date: Circa 1750-1760

     

  • Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Dish Blue and White Hand Painted Kangxi 1700

    Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Dish Blue and White Hand Painted Kangxi 1700

    $370.00

    This beautiful blue and white porcelain dish was made in China during the Kangxi reign (1662–1722).
    It was created specifically for export to the European market.
    Measuring 8.25 inches in diameter, it is hand-painted in a clear, slightly bright cobalt blue that remains vivid and fresh.
    The design features a central floral medallion surrounded by radiating panels filled with flowering plants and scholarly objects.
    This segmented layout, often associated with the “klapmuts” style, combines delicate brushwork with balanced, and rhythmic composition.
    The underside of the dish is decorated with precious objects that represent the “Hundred Treasures” motif—symbols of learning, prosperity, and good fortune highly prized in Chinese culture.
    The dish is in excellent condition, with a bright glaze, crisp painting, and no chips, cracks, or restorations.
    It exemplifies the refined artistry and lively style that made Kangxi blue and white porcelain so sought after both historically and today.
    Diameter: 8.25 inches
    Condition: Excellent; bright glaze, no damage or restoration

  • Set of Six Antique Worcester Dishes English Imari Pink & Blue 1792–1803

    Set of Six Antique Worcester Dishes English Imari Pink & Blue 1792–1803

    $560.00

    This set of porcelain dishes was hand-painted by Flight Barr Worcester between 1792 and 1803.
    Each of the six dishes can be seen in one of the first three images.
    The pattern features delicate floral sprays in soft strawberry pink, orange, and rich cobalt blue, accented with gilt highlights.
    The design is an English interpretation of the traditional Imari palette.
    A stylized central bouquet anchors the composition, while four large floral sprays around the border create a balanced design.
    The beautiful decoration is heightened by a finely painted gilt rim.
    The pattern reflects the neoclassical taste for symmetry and delicacy, as well as the broader English fascination with East Asian decorative themes, which are reimagined here as English Imari.
    Worcester porcelain from this period is renowned for its high-quality body, precise painting, and understated elegance.

    Dimensions: 8.35″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

    Marks: The late 18th century Flight Barr Worcester mark “FB under a crown is lightly impressed on the reverse of one of the dishes

  • 18th Century Wedgwood Creamware Bowl with English Strapwork Design Circa 1780

    18th Century Wedgwood Creamware Bowl with English Strapwork Design Circa 1780

    $720.00

    This delicate 18th-century Wedgwood creamware bowl features a hand-painted songbird at its center.
    It is a masterpiece of craftsmanship.
    The bowl is made from fine, pale, cream-colored creamware.
    Its intricate openwork strap design allows light to filter through, creating an airy aesthetic.
    At its heart is a finely molded medallion featuring a hand-painted songbird perched gracefully among branches.
    Elegant brown and green swags frame the medallion, while a single brown-painted strap encircles the bowl’s outer edge, adding to its beauty.
    This exceptional bowl is a testament to Josiah Wedgwood’s artistry in both form and decoration.

    Marks: The impressed Wedgwood mark of the 18th century period

    Dimensions: 8.5″ diameter x 2.35″ tall

    Condition: Excellent

  • Americana Pair Antique English White Salt Glazed Stoneware Dishes 18th Century

    Americana Pair Antique English White Salt Glazed Stoneware Dishes 18th Century

    $630.00

    Pair of 18th Century English Salt Glazed Oval Dishes — A Style Favored by George Washington
    This lovely pair of small salt glazed oval dishes is a true piece of Americana—a style admired and imported by George Washington himself.
    In the fall of 1757, Washington received the first of several shipments of white salt glazed stoneware from Thomas Knox, a merchant in Bristol, England.
    These refined ceramics were fashionable and practical additions to his Virginia table.
    In a letter dated December 26, 1757, Washington noted that the shipment arrived “incomplete with two things broke,” reflecting not only the fragility of the ware, but also its desirability and significance.
    Made in England circa 1760, this pair of dishes is crisply molded in the Basket-Dot-Diaper pattern, one of the most elegant and technically accomplished designs of the period.
    The fine white body, achieved through a blend of Devonshire clay and calcinated flint, marked a turning point in English stoneware production. Its cleaner, whiter surface distinguished these wares from earlier, browner-bodied examples.
    Salt glaze stoneware of this kind was widely used in Colonial America and admired for its beauty and durability.
    Shards of this pattern have been recovered archaeologically in Colonial Williamsburg, providing direct evidence of its presence and popularity in 18th-century American homes.
    (See: Salt-Glazed Stoneware in Early America, Skerry & Hood, p. 151.)
    This pair offers not only elegant design but also a tangible connection to the ceramics that helped shape the material culture of early America.

    Dimensions: 7.25″ long x 6″ wide

    Condition: Excellent, with only minor original firing anomalies typical of 18th-century production

  • Antique Chelsea Derby Porcelain Plate England Ca. 1775 18th Century Hand-Painted

    Antique Chelsea Derby Porcelain Plate England Ca. 1775 18th Century Hand-Painted

    $235.00

    This Chelsea-Derby dish, made in England around 1775, is hand-painted with beautiful flower designs.
    The center features purple roses and an orange tulip, accented by small yellow flowers and green leaves.
    Lovely loose flowers appear to tumble around the center, enhancing its charm.

    Marks: The reverse of the plate is marked with the Chelsea-Derby anchor mark and the letter “D,” which was in use from 1769 to 1784.

    Dimensions: 9.25 inches in diameter.

    Condition: Good, with a single very faint 1.5-inch hairline that has been professionally sealed; it is difficult to see in the images.

  • 18th Century French Porcelain Shallow Bowl Locré Circa 1785

    18th Century French Porcelain Shallow Bowl Locré Circa 1785

    $280.00

    This 18th-century French porcelain dish was hand-painted circa 1785.
    Crafted at the renowned Locré manufactory, also known as Porcelaine de La Courtille, in Paris
    the bowl is decorated with gorgeous handpainted purple roses, complementing green leaves, and small gilded flower sprigs,
    The border continues the same pattern.
    The enameled flowers create a striking visual contrast against the fine white porcelain.
    The small gilded sprigs add an elegant shimmer.

    Craftsmanship:
    Jean-Baptiste Locré founded this celebrated porcelain workshop in 1771.
    Locré porcelain is celebrated for its refined, translucent white body and intricate Rococo-style decoration.
    This bowl reflects the exceptional artistry and attention to detail characteristic of this distinguished Parisian workshop. It offers a glimpse into the refined tastes of the French aristocracy in the late 18th century.

    Marks: The dish bears the Locré crossed torches mark in underglaze blue, a hallmark of authenticity.

    Dimensions: 9.25″ diameter x 1.5″ depth

    Condition: Excellent

  • Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Dish Hand-Painted Qianlong Era Circa 1760

    Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Dish Hand-Painted Qianlong Era Circa 1760

    $360.00

    This exquisite Chinese export porcelain powder-blue dish was hand-painted in the 18th century during the Qianlong Era, circa 1760.
    The center is painted in famille verte enamels.
    It features a fierce **Kylin in a traditional fenced garden with a flowering plum tree.
    Around the center are four fan-shaped panels showing birds and insects among flowers.
    The panels are reserved against a powder-blue ground that is gilt-decorated with floral blooms in outline.
    The famille verte reserves create a visual focus against the powder blue.
    This method of decoration adds depth and variety to this wonderful porcelain dish.

    Dimensions: 8.35″ diameter

    Condition: Very Good. There is light wear to the gilding on the powder blue. A half-inch flat flake has been invisibly restored on the back of the dish.

  • Antique Blue & White Delft Charger by De Klaauw (The Claw) Netherlands Ca. 1780

    Antique Blue & White Delft Charger by De Klaauw (The Claw) Netherlands Ca. 1780

    $1,280.00

    This exceptional Dutch Delft blue and white charger was crafted by the De Klaauw (The Claw) factory circa 1780.
    The entire surface is richly decorated in vibrant cobalt blue.
    The center shows a peacock standing in water, surrounded by delicate flowers and a pair of fluttering butterflies.
    The double border is adorned with alternating panels of peacock feathers and floral motifs.
    The scalloped and barbed rim adds an elegant finishing touch.
    A similar pair of chargers is in the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s Bloomfield Collection (1882-773, 775).
    For an image and further discussion of this charger, see: E Schaap: “Delft Ceramics at the Philadelphia Museum of Art” pg 76 and 77.

    Marks: The underside with the mark of De Klaauw (The Claw) in underglaze blue.

    Dimensions: 13.75″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent, with tiny edge frits touched in

  • Antique Blue & White English Delftware Charger 18th Century Hand-Painted C. 1750

    Antique Blue & White English Delftware Charger 18th Century Hand-Painted C. 1750

    $740.00

    This Delft charger showcases a charming hand-painted chinoiserie scene featuring blooming trees, rocky formations, a cottage, and two fishermen in their boats on the water, with birds soaring in the sky above.
    The design covers the entire plate without a separate border, a creative technique rarely seen in 18th-century English Delft pottery. The scene is painted in shades of cobalt blue against a traditional light blue glazed background.

    Marks: The reverse features a factory mark “12.” Such marks are commonly found on 18th-century English Delftware ceramics to indicate the size of an item for display in the factory showroom or to denote its price category.

    Dimensions: 10.75″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with slight edge frits invisibly restored

  • 18th Century Blue and White English Delft Jug Hand-Painted

    18th Century Blue and White English Delft Jug Hand-Painted

    $1,100.00

    This blue and white English Delftware jug, made circa 1750-1760, has a tall, narrow neck with a slightly flared rim on a distinctive globular body. The decoration is the word “BOY” framed by blue dashes.
    It is hand-painted in blue, done in a freehand, fluid style that includes typical irregularities in the paint.
    Historically, 18th-century English Delftware is known for its freehand, fluid decoration, characterized by minor irregularities that evoke an authentic folk art quality.
    The rustic and uneven glaze is also characteristic of this pottery.
    The bottle has a utilitarian feel, featuring four protruding lugs on the sides.
    Its modest yet charming form, rounded shape, and understated ornamentation reflect the everyday aesthetic of mid-18th-century Delftware production.
    Delftware jugs were often created for public houses, and “Boy” might reference part of a pub name, a local drinking song, or a common toast.
    Given England’s strong maritime traditions, this could just as likely refer to a sailor’s drinking vessel.
    In naval and military slang, “Boy” was often used to refer to young sailors or recruits.
    This hand-painted inscription adds a personal touch, making this jug a unique and engaging example of antique Delftware.

    Dimensions: Height: 8″ Diameter 5″

    Condition: Excellent with very small edge frits typical of Delftware

  • Antique Blue and White English Delft Charger Plate Hand Painted Circa 1760

    Antique Blue and White English Delft Charger Plate Hand Painted Circa 1760

    $1,280.00

    This handpainted blue and white Delft charger, produced in Bristol, England, circa 1760, is a visual delight.
    The center of the charger features a flower garden with songbirds seated on rockwork.
    The songbirds are perched beneath a willow tree while a butterfly hovers above.
    Nearby, we see flowers and a garden fence.
    The border of the charger is adorned with a wide band of delicate flowers.
    This is a beautiful piece of English Delftware.

    Dimensions: 14″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with very small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Set of Three Chinese Export Porcelain Plates Famille Rose Qianlong Dynasty 1760

    Set of Three Chinese Export Porcelain Plates Famille Rose Qianlong Dynasty 1760

    $830.00

    This trio of beautiful Chinese export dishes is decorated in the Famille Rose style.
    It features purple peonies, orange lilies, and a variety of other flowers.
    In Chinese culture, peonies are known as the “king of flowers” and symbolize royalty and wealth. This set of Famille Rose porcelain dishes dates back to the Qianlong period of the Qing dynasty, circa 1760.
    Chinese potters expertly utilized the rich colors of the Famille Rose palette to highlight the beauty of the flowers on these dishes.
    A scrolling band of orange decoration encircles the central subject.
    The rim of each dish features six delicate white and purple flowers separated by a wave pattern washed in green.
    Our trio of dishes embodies the simplicity and beauty characteristic of fine Chinese Famille Rose porcelains.

    Diameter 9″

    Condition: Excellent

  • Pair of Antique Wedgwood & Bentley Black Basalt Jars England, Circa 1775

    Pair of Antique Wedgwood & Bentley Black Basalt Jars England, Circa 1775

    $4,300.00

    This pair of Wedgwood & Bentley black basalt urns was crafted at the renowned Etruria factory around 1775. They show the refined simplicity of Wedgwood’s 18th-century neoclassical design.
    The covers reverse to become candle holders (see images). One side of the cover serves as a lid for the jar, while the other, when inverted, serves as a candle holder, also known as a cassolette.
    The smooth, tapered ovoid bodies rest on square pedestal bases, providing a sense of elegant proportion and balance.
    A band of vertical fluting encircles the shoulders, adding a crisp architectural detail.
    The matte black basalt surface is polished to a subtle sheen, resulting in a lustrous, deep black finish.
    Gracefully curved rope-twist handles extend from the shoulders, framing the urns.
    A delicately draped garland in relief adds a hint of classical ornamentation without disrupting the overall restraint of the design.
    The domed lids, topped with simple finials, complete the composition with quiet elegance.
    The jars’ symmetry and timeless sophistication exemplify the finest of Wedgwood & Bentley’s basalt ware.
    Marks: The rare Wedgwood & Bentley Etruria mark, used from 1769 to 1780, is found on the undersides of each jar.
    Dimensions: 8.75″ tall, x 3.5″ diameter, and 5″ across the handles
    Condition: Excellent

  • Antique Bow Porcelain Plate England Circa 1760

    Antique Bow Porcelain Plate England Circa 1760

    $380.00

    This mid-18th-century Bow Porcelain plate features a hand-painted chinoiserie scene with a pair of black storks.
    One stork wades in the water while the other flies above it.
    Near the storks, foliage emerges from rockwork, all rendered in beautiful pastel colors.
    The rockwork is light blue, the leaves bright turquoise, and the flowers soft pinkish-purple.
    A brown painted edge accentuates the plate’s hexagonal shape.

    Dimensions: 7.75″ height x 7.75″ width

    Condition: Some small kiln burn spots and two small flat edge chips restored on the underside (see last image).

  • Antique Dutch Delft Plate Depicting a Walking Man, Netherlands Circa 1780

    Antique Dutch Delft Plate Depicting a Walking Man, Netherlands Circa 1780

    $330.00

    This hand-painted plate, made in the Netherlands around 1780, features the “Walking Man,” a decorative motif commonly found in 18th-century Dutch Delftware.
    The image depicts a man in mid-stride, wearing a wide-brimmed Dutch-style hat and carrying a cane.
    This motif reflects the Dutch appreciation for scenes of everyday life, capturing people engaged in daily activities.
    On our plate, the Walking Man strolls past a garden depicted by just a few brightly colored flowers.
    The border is decorated with a floral design painted in manganese purple and iron red.
    The artist used traditional Dutch Delft polychrome colors, including iron red, blue, moss green, and manganese.

    Dimensions: 8.75″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

  • Pair Antique Dutch Delft Blue and White Chargers Netherlands Circa 1780

    Pair Antique Dutch Delft Blue and White Chargers Netherlands Circa 1780

    $1,740.00

    This pair of blue and white Dutch Delft chargers was hand painted in the Netherlands circa 1780.
    They feature a vibrant and beautiful design with a large flower at the center, surrounded by leaves and swirling vines.
    The border is decorated with similar leaves and swirling vines in a complementary style.
    The yellow-painted edge is meant to imitate the gilded edge of much 18th-century porcelain.

    Dimensions: 13.5″ diameter x1.5″ height

    Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Pair of Delft Blue and White Chargers Netherlands 18th Century Circa 1780

    Pair of Delft Blue and White Chargers Netherlands 18th Century Circa 1780

    $2,500.00

    This pair of Dutch Delft blue and white chargers was hand-painted in the last quarter of the 18th century, circa 1780.
    Each charger features a beautiful songbird perched on rockwork and surrounded by exquisite flowers (see enlarged images).
    Nearby, a garden fence delineates the garden.
    The central scene is vibrant and full of energy, capturing the essence of a garden so perfectly that it seems almost alive.
    The borders of the chargers contain six panels, each panel showing a single flower.

    Dimensions: 13.5″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Pair Antique Blue and White Delft Jars 18th Century

    Pair Antique Blue and White Delft Jars 18th Century

    $1,600.00

    This pair of Dutch Delft mantle jars was hand-painted in the Netherlands circa 1770.
    The decoration captures the quiet poetry of the Dutch countryside.
    Each jar is painted in luminous cobalt blue with a pastoral scene of cows resting peacefully within a fenced meadow.
    The meadow is framed by gently bending trees and distant mountains beneath a sky dotted with birds in flight.
    The composition draws the viewer’s eye to the cows, a symbol of rural life and harmony with nature.
    Each jar is topped with a finial in the form of a pug-like dog, inspired by the Chinese ‘foo dog’ motif.
    The jars convey a sense of tranquility, showcasing a scene of everyday Dutch life in an elegant shape.
    Dimensions: 14.5″ tall x 6.5″ diameter at the widest point x 4″ diameter at the base
    Condition: Excellent, with minor edge chips invisibly restored
    Price: $1,600
    Notable Details
    Pair of 18th-century Dutch Delft mantle jars
    Hand-painted in blue and white with pastoral cow scenes
    Covers topped with classic Delft spotted lion finials
    Rococo-inspired design, combining pastoral imagery with sculptural lids

  • Large Saltglaze Stoneware Charger England Mid-18th Century Circa 1765

    Large Saltglaze Stoneware Charger England Mid-18th Century Circa 1765

    $1,280.00

    George Washington considered stoneware a fashionable and practical choice for his table.
    This charger is true Americana!
    On September 28, 1757, the first of several shipments from Thomas Knox, an agent in Bristol, was sent to Washington.”
    Made in England circa 1765, this large saltglaze charger is crisply molded in the Cartouche/Diaper pattern.
    It is a beautiful example of the type of pottery that was popular in Colonial America.
    The combination of calcinated flint and Devonshire clay, which was used to make the charger, was a game-changer for English saltglaze stoneware as it resulted in a whiter, less brown color.
    Saltglaze stoneware shards in this Cartouche/Diaper pattern were recovered archaeologically in Colonial Williamsburg.

    Dimensions: 16.5″ diameter x 1.25′ deep

    Condition: Excellent with minimal original firing anomalies

    See Salt-Glazed Stoneware in Early America J E Skerry and S Fndlen Hood pg 140.
    For images and more details, see Salt-Glazed Stoneware in Early America by J E Skerry and S Fndlen Hood, pp. 233 and 136.

  • Antique Worcester Porcelain Dish England Circa 1790

    Antique Worcester Porcelain Dish England Circa 1790

    $285.00

    This elegant late 18th-century Worcester Porcelain dish is fluted and decorated along the border with a beautiful string of leaves painted in light green, purple, and gilt.
    The simple decoration works to reveal the fluting of the porcelain.
    A circle of gilt arches marks the beginning of each flute. Each flute then ends at a high point on the gilded edge.

    Dimensions: 7.5″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

  • Blue and White Delft Charger 18th Century Netherlands Circa 1770

    Blue and White Delft Charger 18th Century Netherlands Circa 1770

    $580.00

    This lovely 18th-century Dutch Delft charger showcases hand-painted decoration in deep, dark blue.
    We see ten panels of floral decoration filled with tulip bulbs and scrolling vines.

    Dimensions: 11.5″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

  • Antique Blue and White Delft Charger 18th Century Netherlands Circa 1780

    Antique Blue and White Delft Charger 18th Century Netherlands Circa 1780

    $880.00

    This elegant Dutch Delft blue and white charger was hand-painted in the Netherlands around 1770.
    The center features delicate scrolling vines swirling around a beautiful flower.
    Two tones of blue are used to make the large central flower stand out from the rest of the design.
    The charger is shaped so that the flower at the center is slightly raised.
    The wide border is decorated with six flower bulbs and scrolling vines,
    Marks: the underside shows the mark of the 18th-century Delft factory, “The Axe.”

    Dimensions: 13.75″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with tiny edge frits invisibly restored

  • Antique Blue and White Mennecy Porcelain Tureen Mid-18th Century France Ca. 1750

    Antique Blue and White Mennecy Porcelain Tureen Mid-18th Century France Ca. 1750

    $760.00

    This delightful 18th-century blue and white porcelain tureen was hand-painted at the Mennecy Porcelain factory in France circa 1750.
    Loose flower sprigs painted in cobalt blue decorate the tureen and its fixed stand.
    The porcelain has the creamy tone that soft paste Mennecy Porcelain is known for.
    The overglaze blue decoration appears to sink into the smooth, soft-paste porcelain, creating a beautiful, soft look.

    Dimensions: 10″ long x 6″ wide x 5.5″ height

    Condition: Excellent

    Marks: Marked on the underside with the Mennecy factory “D/V” mark

  • Pair Antique Blue and White Dutch Delft Vases with Marks 1705-1716

    Pair Antique Blue and White Dutch Delft Vases with Marks 1705-1716

    $3,300.00

    This elegant marked pair of Dutch Delft vases dates from the early 18th century.
    It was hand-painted between 1705 and 1716 at De Drie Posteleyne Astonne workshop.
    A similar pair can be found in the Philadelphia Museum’s Bradbury Bedell Memorial Collection 1921-3-159, 160.
    The vases are beautifully hand-painted and feature cobalt blue decoration in the early to mid-18th-century “Thousand Flowers” style.
    Each vase depicts a lovely garden scene with a long-tailed songbird surrounded by flowers, leaves, and scrolling vines.
    The decoration around each base consists of ornamental panels alternating with a floral motif.
    Fine blue lines encircle and define the five sections of each vase.
    The design is lively, and the painting is beautifully done.
    The quality of the glaze is exceptional.
    The vases have a traditional, softly rounded hexagonal shape with bases that flare out at the bottom.
    Their long hexagonal necks end in a flared trumpet-shaped opening.
    In Dutch, this type of vase is called “knobbelvaas.”
    Dimensions: 12 inches tall x 5.5 inches at the widest point
    Condition: Excellent
    Marks: PK for Pieter Kam at the De Drie Posteleyne Astonne workshop marks (see the mark in the last image).
    1. Form of the Mark
    The tall vertical stroke with a small angled “K” is a known PK variant, similar to the “PK 7” and “PK 8” marks on Delftware from about 1700–1710. Its slightly uneven brushwork is consistent with authentic early Delft.
    2. Attribution
    Both Pieter Gerritsz Kam (active c.1700–1705) and his widow Maria van der Kloot (c.1705–1716) used PK. The mark places it firmly in the Kam workshop.
    3. Comparison with the Philadelphia Museum of Art
    The Philadelphia Museum’s Bradbury Bedell Collection includes jars with nearly identical PK marks. Like our pair, they are octagonal vases with blue-and-white decoration, confirming a close link to the Kam workshop’s recognized output.

  • Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Dish 18th Century Qianlong Era C. 1760

    Antique Chinese Export Porcelain Dish 18th Century Qianlong Era C. 1760

    $330.00

    This antique Chinese export porcelain dish was hand-painted in the mid-18th century in the Qianlong Era.
    It features a blossoming plum tree adorned with orange, blue, and gold flowers and green leaves.
    The dish’s wide border is embellished with four floral groups.
    Two groups showcase large gold and orange peonies, while the other two groups depict rockwork and smaller flowers.
    Along the outer edge, orange cross-hatching and floral decoration add texture and elegance to the design.
    The overall effect is beautiful!

    Date: Circa 1760

    Dimensions: 8.75″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

    Following Chinese tradition, the use of orange and green enamels on 18th-century porcelain classifies this dish as famille verte.
    The exquisite craftsmanship of famille verte porcelain is apparent in the delicate application of the enamels.

  • Pair Antique Wedgwood Black Basalt Vases England Late 18th Century Circa 1775

    Pair Antique Wedgwood Black Basalt Vases England Late 18th Century Circa 1775

    $5,800.00

    This exceptional pair of antique black basalt vases was made by Wedgwood & Bentley in the late 18th century, circa 1775.
    The vases are sculpted in deep solid relief with bacchanalian boys in lively motion, a classical motif symbolizing liberation from societal order and the tension between chaos and control.
    The vases have a cylindrical form rising from a square-footed base. They echo neoclassical architecture with elegant scroll handles, a grooved finial, and vertical fluting around the shoulder.
    The sculptural modeling is a hallmark of Wedgwood & Bentley’s finest black basalt work.
    Marks: Each vase is marked “WEDGWOOD & BENTLEY ETRURIA,” used between 1769 and 1780.
    Dimensions: 11.5″ tall x 5.25″ across the handles x 3.25″ square base
    Condition: Excellent
    Price: $6,000
    The factory at Etruria in Staffordshire began producing black basalt in 1769, quickly becoming the leading name in neoclassical ornamental ceramics admired by aristocratic patrons.
    Key Features:
    • Pair of antique black basalt vases by Wedgwood & Bentley
    • Made circa 1775 during the peak of neoclassical fashion
    • Deep relief frieze of bacchanalian boys
    • Scroll handles and fluted architectural elements
    • Marked “WEDGWOOD & BENTLEY ETRURIA” (1769–1780)
    • Superb example of 18th-century English neoclassical design

  • Antique Worcester Porcelain Bowl Imari Style Dr Wall First Period England C-1755

    Antique Worcester Porcelain Bowl Imari Style Dr Wall First Period England C-1755

    $900.00

    This mid-18th century First Period Worcester Porcelain bowl was made in England circa 1755.
    It is hand-painted in the beautiful Worcester Imari style ”Fan Pattern.”
    The pattern is also known as “The Old Japan Pattern.”
    The bowl is decorated in underglaze blue and overglaze red, green, and gilt.
    The pattern features half chrysanthemum roundels, petaled alternately in underglaze blue, red, green, and gilt, and circular gold-diapered blue medallions.
    It is exquisite!
    For an example of a Worcester Fan Pattern dish from this early period, see Fitzwilliam Museum Cat. Number C.44-1927.

    Marks: Worcester mock Chinese marks in underglaze blue were used from 1753 to 1765. Ref: Frank Lloyd Collection, pl 10, no 60.

    Dimensions: 6.5″ diameter x 3″ tall

    Condition: Excellent

  • Chinese Porcelain Ginger or Temple Jars Famille Rose Hand Painted Qianlong

    Chinese Porcelain Ginger or Temple Jars Famille Rose Hand Painted Qianlong

    $7,800.00

    This exceptional pair of 18th-century Chinese porcelain jars is hand-painted in vibrant famille rose enamels with blooming peonies, chrysanthemums, and plum blossoms in brilliant shades of pink, blue, orange, green, yellow, and red.
    Made during the Qianlong era, circa 1765, each jar is a fine example of the classic ginger jar form, with a rounded body and domed cover.
    While modest in scale, their shape and presence have sometimes led similar pieces to be described as “temple jars” in the decorative arts trade.
    The invention of famille rose enamels in the early 18th century enabled a broader, more nuanced color palette, and this pair showcases the style at its most expressive. The floral compositions are exuberant yet refined, painted with a sensitivity to balance and movement.
    These jars represent Chinese export porcelain at its finest, appealing equally to collectors and decorators.
    Dimensions: 9″ tall x 9″ diameter
    Condition: Excellent
    Price: $7,800
    Decoration: Hand-painted famille rose enamels with peonies, chrysanthemums, and plum blossoms
    Material: Porcelain
    Style: Qing Dynasty, Qianlong Era
    Origin: China
    Date: Circa 1765
    Key Features:
    – Pair of 18th-century Chinese export porcelain jars with lids
    – Decorated in the famille rose palette with vibrant floral motifs
    – Exquisite painting in a broad, nuanced range of enamel colors
    – Made during the Qianlong era (1736–1795)
    – Superb examples of mid-18th-century Chinese porcelain craftsmanship

  • Pair Antique Dutch Delft Cows Hand Painted in Polychrome Colors Circa 1780

    Pair Antique Dutch Delft Cows Hand Painted in Polychrome Colors Circa 1780

    $1,400.00

    This charming pair of small Delft cows was made in Holland around 1780 and painted in the rare and delicate Petit Feu palette.
    Each cow, modeled in a recumbent pose, is beautifully expressive with soft brown forelocks, painted eyes, horns, and tails, and a lively spotted hide. Around each neck is a garland of hand-painted flowers, while across each back rests a bright floral blanket that adds gentle animation to the form.
    The palette, though soft, has remarkable vibrancy, showing the full range of colors achieved by the Petit Feu firing process.
    Both figures rest on grassy green bases shaped to their forms, each side further embellished with decorative marbling in hues of red, yellow, and blue.
    The cows’ peaceful expressions give them a touching charm, bridging folk artistry and fine decorative tradition.
    Dimensions: 3 inches tall x 3.5 inches across the base
    Condition: Excellent, with small chips to the ears invisibly restored
    Price: $1,400 for the pair
    Decoration: Polychrome enamels in Petit Feu colors, featuring garlands, floral blankets, and marbleized bases
    Material: Delft earthenware, tin-glazed
    Style: Dutch Delft polychrome figural pottery
    Origin: Holland
    Date: Circa 1780

  • First Period Worcester Porcelain Queen's Pattern Cup and Saucer Circa 1770

    First Period Worcester Porcelain Queen’s Pattern Cup and Saucer Circa 1770

    $360.00

    This First Period Worcester Porcelain cup and saucer are hand-painted in the beautiful Queen’s Pattern, which was inspired by Japanese Imari porcelain of the 17th century.
    The design features four panels decorated with delicate Kakiemon-style flowers painted in iron red and gold with brightly enameled green and turquoise leaves.
    The panels are separated by underglaze cobalt blue bands with golden scrolling vines and iron red reserves showing chrysanthemums.
    The overall effect is delicate and gorgeous!
    Dimensions: Saucer 5.25″ diameter, cup 3″ tall x 2.65″ diameter
    Marks: The underside of both the saucer and the coffee cup has the pseudo-Chinese Fret mark in underglaze blue used in the First Period.
    Condition: Excellent
    For an example of a First Period Worcester Queen’s Pattern item dated ca. 1770, see Metropolitan Museum of Art Accession Number: 39.140.94

  • Worcester Dr Wall Two Quail Cup and Saucer with Turquoise Border, 18th C. Circa 1770

    Worcester Dr Wall Two Quail Cup and Saucer with Turquoise Border, 18th C. Circa 1770

    $580.00

    This cup and saucer show Worcester’s celebrated interpretation of the Two Quail pattern, hand-painted during the Dr Wall period, produced around 1768 to 1775, when the factory achieved its finest balance of Japanese-derived motifs and European rococo ornament.
    At the center of each piece, the familiar pair of quails sit together on a grassy mound beneath a flowering tree.
    One bird is painted in warm iron red, the other in soft blue, and both carry the little green topknot that is characteristic of Worcester’s polychrome Two Quail decoration.
    The tree rises in a gentle curve, its blossoms rendered in iron red, blue, green, and that distinctive Worcester turquoise, arranged with the asymmetry and spaciousness that reflects the original Kakiemon source while clearly interpreted through an English hand.
    The fluted shapes contribute significantly to the visual effect.
    Worcester’s soft-paste porcelain responds beautifully to fluting, allowing light to move across the surface in a subtle play of highlights that sits comfortably beneath the fine overglaze enamels.
    This was one of the factory’s preferred shapes for Kakiemon-inspired patterns because the form adds delicacy without disturbing the clarity of the painted scene.
    Around the rim, the wide turquoise rococo border provides the unmistakably Worcester frame used for their best mid-18th-century pieces.
    Its rich color, softened by gilt accents, creates a striking contrast with the white ground and draws the viewer’s attention back toward the central motif.
    This combination of fluting, turquoise border, and Two Quail painting is among the most highly regarded configurations in Dr. Wall Worcester.
    The enamel work here is particularly refined.
    The quails are lively, the foliage well spaced, and the blossoms painted with the precision and warmth associated with the best hands in the factory.
    The turquoise border remains vibrant, and the gilding is carefully applied along the scalloped edges.
    Worcester produced the Two Quail pattern for only a limited period, and examples combining this palette with fluted shapes and turquoise rococo borders are especially prized among collectors.
    This set represents an ideal expression of Worcester’s adaptation of East Asian design, filtered through the taste and technical sophistication of the late 18th century.

    Dimensions: Saucer 5.5″ diameter, cup 2.5″ tall x 2.5″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent 

    Decoration: Hand-painted Two Quail pattern with turquoise and gilt rococo border
    Material: Soft-paste porcelain
    Style: Dr Wall period Worcester
    Origin: Worcester, England
    Date: Circa 1768–1775

     

  • Antique First Period Dr. Wall Worcester Trio Tea Cup Coffee Cup & Saucer C-1770

    Antique First Period Dr. Wall Worcester Trio Tea Cup Coffee Cup & Saucer C-1770

    $380.00

    This First Period Worcester Porcelain trio is hand-painted in the Old Japan Star Pattern.
    It comprises a teacup, coffee cup, and saucer made in 18th-century England circa 1770.
    The set is decorated in the Imari palette with iron red, scale blue, and gilt colors.
    Gilt-edged panels decorated with shells, stars, and stylized flowers in iron red,
    with blue-scale reserves surrounding the panels.
    The decoration is outstanding!
    Both the saucer and teacup have a central iron red rosette (see images).
    For an example with an image of a cup and saucer in the Old Japan Star Pattern, see Bonhams EUROPEAN CERAMICS, GLASS & ASIAN ART
    5 July 2011 Lot 149.
    Marks: Each piece has the Worcester underglaze blue mock Chinese seal mark of the period in use from 1755 to 1775.
    Dimensions: Saucer 5.25″ diameter, teacup 2″ tall x 3.25″ diameter, coffee cup 2.75″ tall x 2.75″ diameter
    Condition: Excellent with only the very slightest rubbing.

  • Chinese Export Porcelain Large Bowl Famille Rose Hand Painted Circa 1770

    Chinese Export Porcelain Large Bowl Famille Rose Hand Painted Circa 1770

    $8,600.00

    This large Chinese Export porcelain bowl was hand-painted in the Famille Rose palette during the Qianlong period, circa 1770.
    The exterior of the bowl is beautifully decorated with flowering pink peonies presented in elegant basket compositions, surrounded by turquoise and green leaves and small blossoms in gilt and white.
    The turquoise and green leaves combine with the pink peonies to create a gorgeous scene.
    The painting is finely detailed, with soft, harmonious colors that reflect the refinement of mid eighteenth-century export wares made for the European market.
    The bowl has gently flaring sides and rests on a traditional short foot, giving it both presence and balance.
    Inside the rim is a continuous band of scrolling vines and floral sprays, which provides a lively counterpoint to the larger exterior decoration.
    It’s fabulous!
    The flower basket design is a well-known and admired pattern in eighteenth-century Chinese porcelain, with a closely related example illustrated on page 205 of Chinese Ceramics in the Collection of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam by C. J. A. Jörg.
    Dimensions: 14 inches diameter across the rim, 6.75 inches high, 7 inches diameter at the base
    Condition: Excellent, with slight wear to the gilding on the delicate branches just below the rim, consistent with handling
    Decoration: Famille Rose enamels with floral basket motifs and interior border
    Material: Chinese Export porcelain
    Style: Qianlong period, mid-eighteenth century
    Origin: China
    Date: Circa 1770
    Notable Details:
    • Large-scale bowl with classic Qianlong-period proportions
    • Fine Famille Rose palette with soft, harmonious coloration
    • Well-documented flower basket motif illustrated in the Rijksmuseum collection
    • Strong example of eighteenth-century Chinese porcelain made for the European market

     

  • 18th Century French Creamware Figure by Cyfflé at Saint Clément, Circa 1770

    18th Century French Creamware Figure by Cyfflé at Saint Clément, Circa 1770

    $1,600.00

    Queen Marie-Antoinette appointed Saint-Clément as a Royal Supplier for her Petit Trianon at Versailles.
    Here is an 18th-century Saint-Clément hand-painted creamware figure of a young man.
    Modeled by Paul Louis Cyfflé at Saint- Clément in France circa 1775, the figure exhibits outstanding detail,
    such as the young man’s beautiful face, lifelike clothes, and posture.
    He carries a little lamb and a pair of birds to market.
    The sculpting of the clothes is so lifelike that we can almost feel the fabrics draping on his body.
    Complementing the excellent modeling, the hand-painted colors are exquisite!
    This young man is part of Cyfflé’s first series of figures in which he presented statuettes of tradesmen.

    Dimensions: 8.5″ height x 4.25″ wide x 3.5″ deep

    Condition: Excellent

    Provenance: From the collection of William and Marilyn (Milton) Simpson: Marilyn Simpson was a grandchild of John D. Rockefeller Jr.
    The paper label on the underside of the figure states: “Saint Clément by-Cyffle c.1775 Parke-Bernet March 1957.”

  • Dr Wall First Period Worcester Sugar Box 18th Century Circa 1775

    Dr Wall First Period Worcester Sugar Box 18th Century Circa 1775

    $600.00

    This is a hand-painted First-Period Worcester Porcelain sugar box from the 18th century.
    The lively floral design is painted in green, blue, purple, and gilt.
    We see purple stems and purple flowers with gilt stamens, along with green and gilt leaves.
    The cover and the inner edge of the sugar box are decorated with underglaze blue arcades that are accented with leafy sprigs of gold (see images).
    The cover’s button finial is painted with a blue flower outlined in gilt.
    The sugar box and cover are gently lobed, which adds visual excitement as light plays over the curved surfaces.
    Made in England circa 1775, this sugar box is altogether delightful!
    Dimensions: 5″ tall x 4.5″ diameter
    Condition: Excellent, with the very slightest rubbing on the gilded top edge of the body, which sits under the cover (see image #7).
    Marks: On the underside is the Worcester First Period crescent in underglaze blue (see last image).
    Early Worcester Porcelain marks are rarely seen—a blue crescent mark (seen here) dates pieces back to the ‘First’ or ‘Dr Wall’ period (1751-1783).

  • Dr Wall First Period Worcester Sugar Box England Circa 1775

    Dr Wall First Period Worcester Sugar Box England Circa 1775

    $740.00

    This 18th-century First Period Worcester Porcelain sugar box was hand painted featuring beautiful swags painted with green leaves, purple plums, and two-tone purple and yellow apples.
    Each swag is tied with a purple ribbon in an elegant bow. Green leaves and two-tone plums hang from each ribbon.
    The cover finial is crafted as a budding rose painted in gorgeous pinkish purple and yellow supported by two green leaves.
    The sugar box’s border and cover are both adorned with a band of underglaze blue and a chain of golden ribbons
    and are gently lobed, which adds visual excitement as light plays over the curved surfaces.
    Made in England circa 1775, this sugar box is a gem!
    Dimensions: 5″ tall x 4.5″ diameter
    Condition: Excellent
    Marks: On the underside is the Worcester First Period crescent in underglaze blue (see last image).
    Early Worcester Porcelain marks are rarely seen—a blue crescent mark (seen here) dates pieces back to the ‘First’ or ‘Dr Wall’ period (1751-1783).

  • Dutch Delft Polychrome Jar 18th Century Hand Painted at De Bloempot

    Dutch Delft Polychrome Jar 18th Century Hand Painted at De Bloempot

    $535.00

    This lovely 18th century Delft jar was made in the factory of De Bloempot in Delft, The Netherlands, circa 1780.
    The design features a gentleman with a top hat and a walking stick standing at the side of a river.
    He looks across at the buildings of a Dutch village.
    Above and below, the scene is framed by two large molded flowers.
    The cover has a traditional Dutch Delft bird and ball finial.
    The underside of the jar has the mark of the De Bloempot factory.

    Dimensions: 13.5″ tall x 6″ at the widest point x 4″ deep

    Condition: Excellent with small edge chips invisibly restored

  • Set Eight Blue and White Delft Chargers Hand Painted Netherlands Ca. 1780-1820

    Set Eight Blue and White Delft Chargers Hand Painted Netherlands Ca. 1780-1820

    $11,600.00

    This set of eight blue and white Delft chargers was made at De Vergulde Bloempot and De Klaaw in the Netherlands between 1780 and 1820. They feature the gorgeous “Peacock” pattern, one of the most popular patterns in Dutch Delft. They are hand-painted in a deep cobalt blue and measure between 13.5″ and 13.75″ in diameter. The pattern has been known since the 17th century and is named after the central image of a vase filled with flowers and ferns, resembling a peacock’s tail. The peacock’s tail motif symbolizes beauty and elegance. The crisp yellow slip-painted rim brings out the color of the cobalt blue.

    Condition: Excellent, with minor edge frits in the yellow borders invisibly restored.

    Dimensions: 13.5″-13.75″ diameter

  • Pair Coalport Cobalt Blue Gilded Dishes Hand Painted with Roses England C-1820

    Pair Coalport Cobalt Blue Gilded Dishes Hand Painted with Roses England C-1820

    $480.00

    This pair of Coalport Dishes was hand painted at the Coalport factory, England circa 1820.
    The dishes are decorated with panels of pink roses on crisp white porcelain surrounded by cobalt blue ground richly embellished with gilt decoration.
    The combination is exquisite!

    Dimensions: 11″ long x 7.5″ wide

    Condition: Overall excellent with slight rubbing to the gilded outer edge

  • Pair Blue and White Dutch Delft Chargers Hand Painted 18th Century

    Pair Blue and White Dutch Delft Chargers Hand Painted 18th Century

    $1,800.00

    This lovely pair of Delft chargers were hand-painted at “The Claw”*in Delft, the Netherlands, circa 1800.
    They feature a beautiful garden scene with leaves and flowers against a bright white sky.
    The border of the chargers has five panels, each with a single tulip bud and scrolling vines.
    Deep blue panels separate the decorated panels.
    The painting is crisp, and the cobalt blue shows beautifully on the tin-glazed white ground.
    The yellow painted edge enhances the overall blue coloring.
    Each charger has the underglaze blue mark of “The Claw.”

    Dimensions: 13.75″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with small edge chips invisibly restored

  • Dutch Delft Blue and White Charger Hand Painted 18th Century Circa 1780

    Dutch Delft Blue and White Charger Hand Painted 18th Century Circa 1780

    $1,200.00

    This lovely blue and white Delft charger was made in the Netherlands around 1780.
    It was meticulously hand-painted in two shades of cobalt blue on a white tin-glazed surface.
    The center of the charger portrays a beautiful garden scene, with a blooming orange tree and a garden fence.
    The wide border of the charger showcases a repeating pattern of leaves, buds, and single flowers enclosed in ogival cartouches.

    Dimensions: 13.25″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Blue and White Dutch Delft Plate or Dish Netherlands Circa 1780

    Blue and White Dutch Delft Plate or Dish Netherlands Circa 1780

    $330.00

    This 18th century blue and white Delft plate was hand painted circa 1780. The lively scene in the center features flowers, flower buds, and a polka-dotted vase. The border is decorated with 17 ogival panels, each showing a single flower. Along the edge is a band of geometric design. The elements work together to form a lovely piece of decorative art.

    Dimensions: 9″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Blue and White Delftware Dish Hand Painted 18th Century Circa 1760

    Blue and White Delftware Dish Hand Painted 18th Century Circa 1760

    $380.00

    This beautiful blue and white delftware dish was hand painted in England around 1760. It features a lively garden scene with a butterfly hovering on one side and a songbird in flight her head tilted up in song on the other. The scene is set against rockwork and blooming flowers. The border is decorated with three garden fences which create a sense of multiple perspectives, adding to the excitement of the central scene.

    Dimensions: 8.75″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Small Antique Blue & White Delft Plate English Chinoiserie Hand-Painted, C.1760

    Small Antique Blue & White Delft Plate English Chinoiserie Hand-Painted, C.1760

    $380.00

    This stunning small blue and white Delft plate was hand painted in England around 1760. It’s a gem! The plate features a charming chinoiserie scene, where an Oriental figure is pointing towards a vase while two butterflies flutter nearby. It seems as though she is signaling to both the viewer and the butterflies to take notice of the exquisite flowers that overflow the vase. Painted with flowers, flower buds, and scrolling vines, the lively border frames the center scene. This is a small gem of blue and white Delft!

    Dimensions: 7.75″ diameter x .5″ height

    Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted Liverpool, England 18th Century Ca. 1760

    Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted Liverpool, England 18th Century Ca. 1760

    $1,320.00

    This blue and white Delft charger was hand-painted in Liverpool, England, during the mid-18th century, around 1760. The design features simple yet elegant decoration, showcasing flowers in full bloom, along with leaves and rockwork.
    The border is also decorated with similar floral motifs.
    The entire scene is rendered in just two shades of underglaze blue, and the blue-painted edge—a characteristic of some 18th-century Liverpool Delft—gracefully frames the artwork.
    The back of this Delftware charger is decorated with simple lines that suggest floral designs (see the last image)
    Dimensions: 13.5″ diameter x 1.5″ height
    Condition: Excellent, with slight edge frits invisibly restored; the edge blue retouched

  • Antique Chelsea Porcelain Oval Dish Red Anchor C-1752-56 Fruits and Insects

    Antique Chelsea Porcelain Oval Dish Red Anchor C-1752-56 Fruits and Insects

    $520.00

    This gorgeous Chelsea Porcelain botanical dish was hand painted in England circa 1752-1756.
    The polychrome enamels depict fruits: apples, pears, plums, melons, and, in the center, a delightful pair of cherries.
    Four generous fruit clusters encircle the cherries, all interspersed with sprigs of green and turquoise leaves.
    Two perfect insects, a delicate and graceful butterfly, and a charming ladybug, add a touch of whimsy to this botanical gem.
    The oval rim is shaped and painted in a vibrant turquoise hue that brings out the colors of the fruit: deep red, soft pink, yellow, and blue, together with two tones of green, purple, and turquoise.
    Chelsea porcelain is soft-paste porcelain with a unique and charming property.
    The porcelain was made using glass frit and clay, bone ash, soapstone, flint, and quartz.
    In the heat of the kiln, the glass frit pools inside, resulting in many small “moons” of glass that can be seen by holding the translucent porcelain up to an intense light
    Our dish is a fine example of the high standard for taste and execution during the Red Anchor period at Chelsea.
    Dimensions: 13″ x 10.25″ x 3″ tall
    Condition: Excellent

    Red anchor mark to the base (see the last image).
    The stand shown in the main image comes along with the dish.

  • Set 4 Dinner Dish 4 Soup Bowls 2 Chargers Imperial Vienna Porcelain Ca-1790

    Set 4 Dinner Dish 4 Soup Bowls 2 Chargers Imperial Vienna Porcelain Ca-1790

    $560.00

    This elegant set of hand painted 18th-century Imperial Vienna Porcelain dishes features four dinner dishes, four soup/pasta bowls,
    and a pair of chargers for serving.
    The decoration is refined.
    Along the edge, we see a band of black darts and dots between lines of purple and gilt. The edge is gilded.
    In the center, delicate sprigs of roses and other flowers are painted pink, yellow, purple, blue, and orange.
    Made circa 1790, the sophisticated, understated decoration is perfect.
    Each piece is marked on the underside with the Imperial Vienna Porcelain shield mark.

    Dimensions: the dinners and the soup/pasta bowls are 9.6″ in diameter, and the chargers are 11.25″ in diameter.

    Condition: Excellent

  • Blue and White English Delft Charger Hand Painted Mid 18th Century Circa 1760

    Blue and White English Delft Charger Hand Painted Mid 18th Century Circa 1760

    $1,130.00
    This exquisite hand-painted Delft charger, made in Liverpool, England, circa 1760, captures a moment in time.
    The center of this Delftware charger features a hovering songbird, a large peony, and a pair of butterflies, creating a lovely garden scene.
    The scene flows onto the border, where two butterflies and three flower sprigs add to the charm.
    The entire scene is rendered in just two shades of underglaze blue, and the blue-painted edge—characteristic of some 18th-century Liverpool Delft—elegantly frames the artwork.
    Dimensions: 13.5″ diameter x 1.5″ height
    Condition: Excellent, with slight edge frits invisibly restored; the edge blue retouched.
  • Pair Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Saucers 18th Century England Ca-1785

    Pair Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Saucers 18th Century England Ca-1785

    $265.00

    This pair of blue and white porcelain saucers was made by Caughley in England circa 1785.
    Painted in underglaze blue, they show a lovely chinoiserie scene of a mother and son in a lush garden with flowering trees and several large vases.
    The blue line around the edge of each saucer frames and enhances the scene.
    The underside of each saucer has the Caughley crescent mark in underglaze blue.

    Dimensions: 5″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

  • Delft Charger Hand Painted Polychrome Colors 18th Century Netherlands C-1780

    Delft Charger Hand Painted Polychrome Colors 18th Century Netherlands C-1780

    $560.00

    Made in the Netherlands circa 1780, this lovely Delft charger features a hand painted bouquet of beautiful flowers.
    We see a large yellow tulip, yellow tulip buds, and bright blue leaves, all tied together with an iron red bow.
    Encircling the bouquet of flowers is a wide band of geometric pattern painted in iron red, and yellow.
    The border has a second band of geometric pattern, this one painted in two shades of blue.

    Dimensions: 13.5″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisible restored

  • Dutch Delft Charger Hand Painted Polychrome Colors 18th Century Holland C-1780

    Dutch Delft Charger Hand Painted Polychrome Colors 18th Century Holland C-1780

    $560.00

    This antique Dutch Delft charger is hand painted in a vibrant array of polychrome hues, including cobalt blue, green, yellow, iron red, ochre, and manganese purple.
    We see a beautiful flower-filled garden featuring a willow tree with a purple trunk and ochre leaves, a single large flower with green and red leaves, a garden fence painted in purple with yellow posts outlined in red, and rockwork painted in a vibrant blue.
    The palette of colors is harmonious.
    The bright blue rockwork enhances all the other colors of the scene.
    The effect is beautiful!

    Dimensions: 14.25″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with small edge chips invisibly restored

  • Three Antique Delft Chargers Hand Painted Netherlands Circa 1780

    Three Antique Delft Chargers Hand Painted Netherlands Circa 1780

    $960.00

    This collection of three antique Dutch Delft chargers showcases the craftsmanship of the 18th-century potteries in the city of Delft.
    Each charger is hand painted in a vibrant array of polychrome hues, including cobalt blue, green, yellow, iron red, ochre, and manganese purple.
    The charger on the bottom of the main image shows a beautiful hand painted flower-filled garden.
    We see a single large flower with green and iron red leaves, a willow tree with a purple trunk and ochre leaves, a garden fence painted in manganese with yellow posts outlined in iron red, and vibrant blue rockwork, which enhances all the other colors of the scene.
    The charger at the upper left of the image shows a lovely sprig of flowers with a large yellow tulip, yellow tulip buds, and bright blue leaves, all tied with an iron red bow.
    Around the center is a wide band with an iron red and yellow geometric pattern.
    The border has green leaves and a geometric pattern in two shades of blue.
    The third, slightly smaller charger (12″diameter) features a beautiful songbird settled on a flowering tree branch. Three butterflies are hovering nearby.
    The border has six panels, each with a floral design separated by iron red “diamonds.”
    The overall effect is harmonious and lovely!

    Diameters: 14″, 13.5″, and 12″

    Condition: Each charger is in excellent condition with slight edge frits invisibly restored.

  • Wedgwood Egyptian Jug Decorated in Black Basalt and Rosso Antico

    Wedgwood Egyptian Jug Decorated in Black Basalt and Rosso Antico

    $1,100.00

    This special edition Wedgwood ale jug is decorated in Egyptian Revival style, showing a sphinx to either side of a firebird in flight. The material is Wedgwood’s Black Basalt stoneware with Wedgwood’s Rosso Antico decoration in the Greek black-figure style, finished with touches of white enamel.
    The rim and base are decorated with piping in Rosso Antico.
    The shape is oviform. The jug stands on a rounded foot with a pinched trefoil spout and loop handle.
    The embossed mark on the bottom: “Wedgwood” “The Egyptian Jug Sold Only by Woollard and Hattersly, Cambridge,” underscores its exclusivity.
    Dimensions: 6.5″ tall x 5.5″ deep x 5″ diameter
    Condition: Excellent.                          Price: $1,100
    Reference: See The Birmingham Museum of Art in 1982 Gift of Dwight and Lucille Beeson, 1982.185
    Also see # 1385-6 British Museum ‘The Egyptian Jug’ for examples of the same shape with sphinxes flanking an eagle.

  • Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted at The Axe Holland Circa 1770

    Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted at The Axe Holland Circa 1770

    $1,260.00

    This blue and white charger was hand painted at De Porcelene Bijl “The Axe” circa 1770.
    The center of the charger is filled with lovely flowering peonies.
    We see flowers in full bloom intertwined with buds and leaves, displaying nature’s cycle of life and renewal.
    The border has ten shaped panels, each enclosing a single flower, a bud, and leaves.
    The pattern includes several shades of blue, giving it depth and visual interest.
    The white edge of the charger is cut in a fabulous lobed pattern that complements the painted decoration. This white edge is accented by a thin blue line.
    The design is dynamic and beautiful!
    The underside of the charger shows the mark of De Porcelene Bijl “The Axe”.

    Dimensions: 12″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Meissen Porcelain 18th Century Leaf Dish Hand Painted Circa 1770

    Meissen Porcelain 18th Century Leaf Dish Hand Painted Circa 1770

    $440.00

    This large 18th century Meissen porcelain leaf form dish incorporates the prevailing artistic trends of the time. Rococo art was known for its emphasis on asymmetry and naturalistic motifs inspired by nature, such as flowers. Meissen porcelain, in the Rococo style, was characterized by delicate and intricate designs. This dish was hand painted with vibrant hues, including pinks, yellows, greens, orange and purple. The colors were applied in a soft and blended manner, creating a sense of delicacy and elegance. The composition of the floral bouquets is arranged in an informal, loose style. The flowers appear as if they were casually gathered together, creating a sense of spontaneity and natural beauty.

    Dimensions: 13″ long x 9.5″ wide x 2″ deep

    Condition: Excellent with slight rubbing to the outer edge gilt in one place (seen best in close-up image #3)

  • Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted 18th Century Netherlands Circa 1780

    Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted 18th Century Netherlands Circa 1780

    $1,160.00

    This beautiful blue and white hand painted charger was made in The Netherlands in the last quarter of the 18th century, circa 1780. It is decorated with an eye-catching floral design that encircles a central medallion. We see floral bands showing flowers and scrolling vines. The vibrant cobalt blue decoration draws your eye from the center outward.

    Dimensions: 12.25″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Pair Blue and White Delft Tobacco Jars Delft Hand Painted 18th Century

    Pair Blue and White Delft Tobacco Jars Delft Hand Painted 18th Century

    $2,400.00

    This outstanding pair of Dutch Delft blue and white tobacco jars was hand painted circa 1770 to hold a type of tobacco named “DÜÎNKERKER.”
    Made in the city of Delft circa 1770, the cobalt blue decoration on the jars is outstanding.
    Framing the title of the jar is a lovely floral decoration of leaves, small flowers, and scrolling vines.
    At the top of the floral decoration, we see a vase bursting with leaves and flowers.
    The covers are 20th century.

    Dimensions: 8.75″ tall (11″with covers) x 7.25″ diameter at widest point

    Condition: Excellent

    Provenance

    One of the pair has the mark of The Blompot on the underside. The Blompot factory operated from 1654 until 1841.
    In addition, the Philadelphia Museum of Art has an almost identical tobacco jar made by a competing contemporary Dutch Delft factory. The museum notes the name on the jar, “DÜÎNKERKER,” refers to a type of tobacco that was more commonly known as DÜÎNKERKEN, spelled with an “N” at the end. Duinkerken is a type of chewing tobacco.
    (For more details from the Philadelphia Museum of Art listing, see ** below)

  • Blue and White Delft Jars and Vases 18th and 19th Centuries 3 pairs 4 Singles

    Blue and White Delft Jars and Vases 18th and 19th Centuries 3 pairs 4 Singles

    $21,060.00

    This collection of exquisite blue and white Dutch Delft jars and vases spans the 18th and 19th centuries. The largest is 23.5″ tall, and the smallest is 10.5″ tall. Five of the items are 18th century. The two largest jars were made in the late 19th century. The total price for the group is $21,060.

    1) Made circa 1780, this 18th century Dutch Delft vase was hand painted with floral decoration of flowers and scrolling vines. A beautiful deep cobalt blue covers most of the surface. The vase has a traditional Dutch Delft shape; an octagonal base rising to the main body, a slim neck ending in a flower bulb shape, and an everted mouth. Dimensions: 10.5″ tall x 4.75″ diameter Condition: Excellent with small edge chips invisibly restored Price: $1,480

    2) Pair Blue and White Delft Vases Hand Painted 18th Century circa 1770 Netherlands This large pair of blue and white Dutch Delft vases were hand painted in beautiful deep cobalt blue. They were made in The Netherlands in the 18th century, circa 1770. The main body of each vase is fully decorated with six cartouches, three showing birds and three showing flowers. In addition, the flower bulb-shaped mouth of each vase is decorated with scrolling vines and flowers. Finally, the neck and the top edge are decorated with designs of stiff leaves. Dimensions: 16.25″ tall x 7″ wide. The base measures 5.75″. Condition: Excellent with small edge chips invisibly restored

    3) Antique Delft Blue and White Jar Made by The Claw Netherlands Circa 1790 This hand-painted jar and cover from circa 1790 boast beautiful Dutch Delft floral artwork. The intricate design features a stunning array of blooms and vines in deep and medium cobalt blue. The shoulders of the jar are adorned with lappets filled with flower heads, and its octagonal form is topped with a simple, deep blue knop. Dimensions: 12.75″ tall x 6″ at widest point x 4.75″ across base Condition: Excellent with small edge frits invisibly restored Price: $960

    4) Pair Blue and White Delft Jars Hand Painted 18th Century Netherlands, Circa 1780 This pair of 18th-century Delft jars has a lovely distinctive style taken from nature. The cobalt blue designs are hand-painted. We see a young woman seated in a garden. Budding peonies and a songbird surround her, and a majestic stag evokes a sense of wonder and enchantment as if you were peering into a fairy tale. The lovely flower-form skirts on the tops add sophistication and elegance to the overall appearance of the jars. The lobed shape of the jars adds life to the decoration as light plays over the curving surface. Everything works together to create a beautiful effect. The underglaze blue “in the factory” mark “10,” and the paper label for the Thomazeau Collection provide authenticity and provenance. Dimensions: 14.5″ tall x 7.25″ diameter at the widest point x 5″ diameter at the base, Condition: Excellent with small edge chips invisibly restored Price: $ 3,820

    5) Pair Blue and White Delft Mantle Jars Hand Painted Netherlands, Circa 1770 This pair of Dutch Delft mantle jars show a delightful rococo scene hand-painted on blue and white Delft. We see a pair of cows resting in a fenced area with a flock of birds in the sky, the background fields, and mountains. The finial on the cover is in the form of the traditional spotted lion. Dimensions: 14.5″ tall x 6.5″ diameter at the widest point x 4″ diameter at the base. Condition: Excellent with small edge chips invisibly restored Price: $2,800 6) Large Blue and White Delft Jar Made in Belgium Circa 1890  Price: $2700

    6) This large Delft jar has a traditional bird and flower decoration painted on a white tin-glazed ground. The decoration captures the beauty of a garden with birds amidst a sea of vibrant flowers. The design on the shoulders and cover is a classic Delft style. We see panels decorated with blue flowers on white ground, separated by a blue background adorned with delicate leaves and vines. The traditional lion finial on the cover adds a regal touch to the piece. The jar’s octagonal shape and light pink tone add an elegant touch. Made by Boch Frères Keramis in La Louvière, Belgium, this jar was created by skilled artisans from a factory that has a rich history. Boch Frères Keramis was established in 1844 and won a gold medal at the Exhibition of Belgian Industry in 1847. The jar is marked on the underside, allowing us to date it to circa 1900. It is an imposing piece. Dimensions: 23.5″ tall x 11″ across x 6.1″ across the base Condition: Excellent, with some faint lines in the glaze from the making Price: $2,800

    7) Very Large Blue and White Delft Jar Belgium circa 1880 This fabulous Delft jar is painted with traditional deep cobalt blue on a tin-glazed ground. The jar has six panels, alternating between flowers in a basket and ferns with scrolling vines. Large blue lappets decorate the shoulders and cover. The jar was made by Boch Frères Keramis in La Louvière, Belgium, circa 1880. Belgium was part of The Netherlands until 1831, and many early workers at Boch Frères Keramis were hired away from Dutch Delft factories. Begun in 1844, Boch Frères Keramis won a gold medal at the exhibition of the Belgian industry In 1847. The underside of the vase is marked BFK. Dimensions: Height 19.5″ x 9.25″ diameter at the widest point x 5.5″ diameter at the base Condition: Excellent Price: $2,800

  • Blue and White Dutch Delft Five Piece Garniture Hand Painted 18th Century C-1760

    Blue and White Dutch Delft Five Piece Garniture Hand Painted 18th Century C-1760

    $5,800.00

    This splendid five-piece Delft garniture, made in Holland in the mid-18th century, circa 1760, captures the harmony and refinement of 18th-century Dutch faience at its height.
    The principal panels depict tranquil landscapes with deer and butterflies beside pagodas, while the side panels show flowering peonies and songbirds perched on garden fences, motifs that beautifully merge European pastoral taste with the enduring fascination for the East.
    Each piece, whether the pair of tall trumpet-shaped vases or the three covered jars, is hand-painted in rich cobalt blue on a soft white tin-glazed ground.
    The lids are surmounted by lion finials, symbolizing vigilance and strength.
    The canted corners are enriched with smaller cartouches of rippling water scenes, and the borders show scrolling flowers and shells, revealing the painter’s confident command of decorative rhythm and detail.
    Together, the five pieces form a complete and balanced garniture, once intended to grace a mantelpiece or cabinet in an elegant Dutch interior, radiating serenity and grandeur.
    Dimensions: The pair of covered trumpet vases and three covered jars are perfectly proportioned, measuring 14.5 inches tall x 6 inches wide x 5.5 inches deep, and 13.85 inches tall x 5.25 inches wide x 5.25 inches deep
    Condition: Very good condition with only minor chips that have been invisibly restored.
    Decoration: Hand-painted in cobalt blue on a white tin-glazed ground.
    Material: Delft earthenware.
    Style: Dutch Rococo.
    Origin: Holland.
    Date: Circa 1760.
    Notable Details:
    • Complete five-piece garniture: three covered jars and two trumpet vases
    • Finials as seated lions, symbolizing vigilance and protection
    • Panels with deer, butterflies, songbirds, and pagoda scenes
    • Deep cobalt blue decoration typical of mid-18th-century Delft

  • Delft Blue and White Vase Hand Painted 18th Century Circa 1780 Netherlands

    Delft Blue and White Vase Hand Painted 18th Century Circa 1780 Netherlands

    $1,100.00

    Made Circa 1780, this 18th century Dutch Delft vase was hand painted with floral decoration of flowers and scrolling vines.
    A beautiful deep cobalt blue covers most of the surface.
    The vase has a traditional Dutch Delft shape; an octagonal base rising to the main body, a slim neck ending in a flower bulb shape, and an everted mouth.

    Dimensions: 10.5″ tall x 4.75″ diameter
    Condition: Excellent with small edge chips invisibly restored

  • Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted Netherlands 17th Century, Circa 1685

    Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted Netherlands 17th Century, Circa 1685

    $750.00

    This blue and white Delft charger dates to the 17th century, circa 1670, a period when Dutch potters responded directly to the arrival of Chinese Kraak porcelain in Europe. Large chargers of this scale were prestige objects, made to be displayed rather than used, and they reflect Delft’s most ambitious attempts to translate Asian porcelain into tin-glazed earthenware for a European audience.
    The decoration closely follows the Kraak porcelain chargers imported from China earlier in the century. Painted in cobalt blue beneath a tin glaze, the palette has the slightly smokier, softened tone characteristic of early Delft, distinct from the brighter, sharper blues of porcelain. At the center is a flowering vase set on a garden terrace, its formal arrangement conveying both abundance and order. Nestled among the blossoms is a scroll, one of the Eight Treasures frequently employed in Chinese decorative art as a symbol of learning and refinement. Butterflies animate the scene, suggesting vitality and transformation. The imagery would have been immediately legible to a late 17th-century European collector attuned to the visual language of Chinese export porcelain.
    The wide border is divided into radiating panels, a hallmark of Chinese inspired design, alternating sunflowers with auspicious Chinese objects. The careful balance of pattern and open space, combined with the confident handling of cobalt blue, gives the charger a strong graphic presence, intended to command attention when hung on the wall or placed on a buffet.
    Chargers of this type were costly to produce and vulnerable to damage, making well-preserved examples increasingly scarce. This piece survives as a compelling example of early Delft’s engagement with global trade, taste, and artistic exchange at the height of the Dutch Golden Age.
    Dimensions: 12.75 inches in diameter
         Condition: Excellent with tiny chips invisibly restored

  • Cabinet Set 6 Chinese Antique Blue and White Porcelain Dishes Hand Painted Kangxi Era C-1700

    Cabinet Set 6 Chinese Antique Blue and White Porcelain Dishes Hand Painted Kangxi Era C-1700

    $5,800.00

    This set of six blue and white Chinese porcelain dishes was hand-painted 300 years ago, circa 1700, during the Kangxi dynasty.
    The dishes are hand-painted in tones of cobalt blue.
    Delicate flowering plum trees, beautiful peonies, and lotus flowers are in full bloom.
    Flowers are everywhere! The effect is gorgeous!
    According to Sir Harry Garner, author of “Oriental Blue and White,” “The Kangxi blue and white reached a technical excellence that has never been surpassed.”
    Marks: On the underside, the dishes have the Chinese square “Fret” mark or the artemisia leaf mark inside a double circle in underglaze blue.

    Dimensions: 9.7″ diameter

    Condition: Small edge frits invisibly restored

  • Set of 4 Blue and White Delft Plates or Dishes Hand Painted 18th Century England, C-1760

    Set of 4 Blue and White Delft Plates or Dishes Hand Painted 18th Century England, C-1760

    $1,400.00

    These exquisite hand-painted Delft dishes, made in Bristol, England, circa 1760 and inspired by Chinese blue and white porcelain, are a perfect example of the mid-18th century English delftware artisans’ skill and creativity. The deep cobalt blue on the pale bluish glaze accentuates the delicate chinoiserie design. The center of each dish features a lovely garden scene, with three types of flowers; peony, plum blossom, and chrysanthemum. For a similar Delft dish, see the English Delftware in the Bristol Collection by Frank Briton image and description on page 190, image 12.24.

    Dimensions: 9″ diameter x .75″

    Condition: Excellent with slight edge frits invisibly restored.

    For a similar Delft dish, see the English Delftware in the Bristol Collection by Frank Briton image and description on page 190, image 12.24.

  • Antique Delft Charger 18th Century Polychrome Colors Netherlands Circa 1770

    Antique Delft Charger 18th Century Polychrome Colors Netherlands Circa 1770

    $780.00

    This large 18th century Dutch Delft charger is a particularly beautiful example of Delft’s fascination with imagined Eastern landscapes, rendered with confidence, balance, and rich color. The broad central well is hand-painted with a finely composed chinoiserie scene in vibrant polychrome enamels, where warm iron red, soft yellow, green, purple, and deep cobalt blue are brought into harmony against the creamy white ground.
    At the center, delicate pavilion-like houses with exotic, upturned roofs sit along a rocky shoreline, their architectural forms lending rhythm and structure to the scene. Behind them, gently rising mountains flow toward the water’s edge, while a single expressive tree anchors the composition, its red foliage spreading across the sky with an almost calligraphic grace. The painter’s confident brushwork gives the landscape a sense of movement and air, allowing the eye to travel naturally through foreground, middle distance, and horizon.
    The wide rim enhances the charger’s decorative impact, bordered with a refined pattern of iron red darts set within crisp blue cross-hatching. This framing device not only heightens the color contrast but also emphasizes the charger’s generous scale, making it a striking display piece whether hung or placed on a stand. The combination of scale, lively polychrome decoration, and assured painting places this charger among the more engaging Delft chargers of the period.
    Dimensions: 13.75 inches diameter, 1.75 inches tall
    Condition: Excellent
    Material: Tin-glazed earthenware
    Style: Dutch Delft, Chinoiserie
    Origin: The Netherlands
    Date: Circa 1770

  • Antique Dutch Delft Charger 18th Century Polychrome Colors Circa 1770

    Antique Dutch Delft Charger 18th Century Polychrome Colors Circa 1770

    $630.00

    This Dutch Delft charger features a hand painted garden scene with large bright yellow flowers, green leaves, small iron red plum blossom flowers, and touches of cobalt blue. The decoration is simple and unsophisticated. The border with five yellow tulips and green leaves.

    Dimensions: 12.25″ diameter x 1.75″ deep

    Condition: Excellent

  • Blue and White Delft Dish Hand-Painted, 18th Century, Circa 1780

    Blue and White Delft Dish Hand-Painted, 18th Century, Circa 1780

    $465.00

    This beautiful blue and white Dutch Delft plate was hand-painted with deep cobalt blue in the Netherlands by “The Axe” in the 18th century, circa 1780. In the center, we see a lovely chinoiserie garden scene with a flowering tree and rockwork. The border has four panels with blue floral decoration on a white ground separated by smaller blue and white panels decorated with a traditional Delft diamond pattern. The edgeof the dish is painted with traditional yellow slip.

    Dimensions: diameter 9.1.”

    Condition: Excellent with tiny edge frits invisibly restored

  • Pair Antique Chinese Porcelain Plates Famille Rose Made Circa 1770

    Pair Antique Chinese Porcelain Plates Famille Rose Made Circa 1770

    $870.00

    This pair of lovely Chinese porcelain plates were hand painted in the Famille Rose style in the mid-18th century. The center of each plate is painted in delicate colored enamels and gold. Small green leaves enhance lovely peonies and other flowers painted in purple, pink, orange, and gold. The border of each plate has four pairs of cranes looking at each other in mid-flight. In Chinese tradition, cranes were believed to live for centuries. The pairs of cranes convey a wish for longevity to the owner of the plates.

    Dimensions: 9″ diameter

    Condition: Excellent

  • Antique Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted Netheralands Circa 1780

    Antique Blue and White Delft Charger Hand Painted Netheralands Circa 1780

    $460.00

    Hand painted circa 1780, this eye-catching blue and white Delft charger is hand painted in shades of cobalt blue with black accents. The artist has captured a vibrant garden scene transporting the viewer to a world of beauty. In the center, we see a pine tree, to one side, a sizeable blossoming peony, and on the other side, a budding peony, all framed by a garden fence that serves as a graceful boundary, enhancing the harmony and balance of the overall design. The border is decorated with four groups of leaves and a single peony bud.

    Dimensions: 11.75″ in diameter x 1.75″ deep

    Condition: Excellent with slight edge frits invisibly restored

  • German Prints Birds Series Ornithological Engravings Martinet-Buffon C-1790 (1)

    German Prints Birds Series Ornithological Engravings Martinet-Buffon C-1790 (1)

    $300.00

    These are small, gem-like, Individual bird scenes.
    They are beautifully drawn, detailed prints of hand-colored copperplate engravings from one of the most important ornithological works of the 18th century.
    These hand-colored engravings were printed in Germany on original 18th-century rag paper taken from the Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux by Georges Louis Leclerc, le Comte de Buffon (1708-1788), with engravings by Francois Nicholas Martinet (1731-1804), published in Paris 1770-1786.

    Dimensions: 6 inches x 3.5 inches (8 inches x 10 inches including the matte)

    Condition: Excellent.

    Price: $300 for the set of four

  • German Prints Birds Series Ornithological Engravings Martinet-Buffon C-1790 (2)

    German Prints Birds Series Ornithological Engravings Martinet-Buffon C-1790 (2)

    $300.00

    These are small, gem-like, Individual bird scenes.
    They are beautifully drawn, detailed prints of hand-colored copperplate engravings from one of the most important ornithological works of the 18th century.
    These hand-colored engravings were printed in Germany on original 18th-century rag paper taken from the Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux by Georges Louis Leclerc, le Comte de Buffon (1708-1788), with engravings by Francois Nicholas Martinet (1731-1804), published in Paris 1770-1786.

    Dimensions: 6 inches x 3.5 inches (8 inches x 10 inches including the matte)

    Condition: Excellent.

    Price: $660 for the set of four

  • Dutch Delft Charger Hand Painted 18th Century Circa 1770

    Dutch Delft Charger Hand Painted 18th Century Circa 1770

    $780.00

    This antique Dutch Delft charger was made in the 18th century, circa 1770. It features a beautiful flower-filled garden hand painted in beautiful polychrome colors. We see a single large, bright yellow peony, other flowers painted in shades of purple, flower buds painted red, green leaves, a pierced rock painted deep cobalt blue, and the garden fence painted red and yellow. The border of the charger is decorated with a ring of flower buds in purple and red with green leaves. The overall effect is lovely!

    Dimensions: 12.25 diameter x 1.75″ tall

    Condition: Excellent with slight edge frits invisibly restored

  • Wedgwood 18th Century Pierced Creamware with Painted Decoration England C-1785

    Wedgwood 18th Century Pierced Creamware with Painted Decoration England C-1785

    $580.00

    This Wedgwood pierced creamware dish was made at the Wedgwood factory in Stoke-on-Trent, England, circa 1785. The elegant piercings are hand-made. The cavetto is decorated with a band of eye-catching red up-down squiggles. The edge of the plate is decorated with a thin band of brown slip. The overall effect is exquisite! This plate is one of my favorites.

    On the underside is the impressed mark “WEDGWOOD.”

    Dimensions: 9″ in diameter

    Condition: Excellent

  • Two 18th Century Pierced Creamware Dishes Oval Shaped Made England Circa 1785

    Two 18th Century Pierced Creamware Dishes Oval Shaped Made England Circa 1785

    $770.00

    Both of these creamware dishes have beautiful piercings in the form of hearts, dots, and diamonds. Made in eighteenth-century England circa 1785, they have lovely impressed neoclassical decoration on the border. The main image shows that the lower dish has a “Silver Edge” and the upper dish has a “Feather Edge.” The upper dish also has a pair of female portraits, and both dishes have vine-form decoration.

    Dimensions: the upper dish measures 10.5″ x 9″ x .75″ in height, and the lower dish measures  11″ x 9.75″ x .75″ in height

    Condition: Excellent with some original light mineral staining on the edge of both dishes

  • Dutch Delft Pancake Plate Lightning Pattern by De Paeuw 'The Peacock' Circa 1730

    Dutch Delft Pancake Plate Lightning Pattern by De Paeuw ‘The Peacock’ Circa 1730

    $530.00

    This extraordinary Dutch Delft pancake plate was made in the early 18th century. Beautifully hand-painted, it features bold zigzag lighting bolts, Bliksemborden, which seem to flash across the plate. Between the lightning bolts, we see clouds painted yellow with red decorations and flowering plants painted blue, green, yellow, and orange. This is one of the very best Dutch polychrome designs. Made by the De Paeuw (The Peacock) factory circa 1730, the decoration on this plate was inspired by Japanese Imari porcelains.

    For an image and more information on this plate, see Delft Ceramics at the Philadelphia Museum of Art by B Schaap pg. 52.

    Dimensions: 9″ in diameter x 1″ tall

    Condition: Excellent with tiny edge frits invisibly restored

  • Pair 18th Century Dutch Delft Plates Hand-Painted Birds & Garden Scene

    Pair 18th Century Dutch Delft Plates Hand-Painted Birds & Garden Scene

    $740.00

    These Dutch pancake plates are adorned with a beautiful hand-painted scene depicting an imaginary garden with an array of flowers growing above the garden fence. A pair of long-tailed songbirds can also be seen in the garden. The landscape is painted in polychrome. In the center, a bird is perched on the fence; a second bird flies above, while numerous plants and flowers sprout from rocks. Another bird is depicted flying in the air.
    The scene is painted in bold Imari colors of cobalt blue and iron red, enhanced by forest green and bright yellow, which replaces the use of gilding.
    As is traditional with Dutch pancake plates, the scene covers the entire surface, with no decorative border.
    The effect is marvelous!
    This pair of plates was made in the Netherlands circa 1780.
    Dimensions: 8.85″ in diameter x 1″ deep
    Condition: Excellent with very small edge frits invisibly restored

     

  • Blue and White Dutch Delft Charger Netherlands Circa 1780 Chinoiserie Design

    Blue and White Dutch Delft Charger Netherlands Circa 1780 Chinoiserie Design

    $700.00

    Made in the factory of “The Axe” circa 1780, this blue and white Delft charger shows a lovely chinoiserie garden scene hand-painted in cobalt blue.
    In the center, we see a pine tree, a garden fence, and a large peony.
    The border is decorated with a delicate scrolling vine.
    The edge is painted with traditional ochre colored slip.
    The charger’s underside has the “The Axe” mark in underglaze blue.

    Dimensions: 13.75″ in diameter x 2″ deep

    Condition: Excellent with slight edge frits invisibly restored

  • Large Blue and White Arras Porcelain Round Soup Tureen French 18th Century

    Large Blue and White Arras Porcelain Round Soup Tureen French 18th Century

    $1,400.00

    This late 18th-century French soup tureen is decorated with an elegant design of delicate cornflower sprigs. The color of the porcelain body is a warm creamy white. The cornflower sprigs, handles, and border edging are decorated with beautiful deep blue enamel. The combination of the creamy white ground and the blue decoration is splendid. The makers of Arras porcelain specialized in porcelain painted in this entrancing twilight blue called “Bleu d’Arras.” Natural forms like the tree branch handle and the blue cornflower decorations were the height of French fashion in the last quarter of the 18th century. This tureen was made at the Arras porcelain factory circa 1780. The underside of the tureen is marked with the letters “AR” and the flying bird symbol of the Arras factory.

    Dimensions:10.25″ diameter x 9″ height

    Condition: Excellent, with some small original firing cracks along the outer edge of the cover (see image #3).