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Theodore Haviland Limoges One Piece Sauce/Gravy Dish

Currency:CAD Category:Collectibles Start Price:5.00 CAD Estimated At:NA
Theodore Haviland Limoges One Piece Sauce/Gravy Dish
We will be hosting pickups on the 18th of December, in Killarney area, Edmonton. Exact Address will be provided to winning bidders through an HTML attached to their invoice. Please read all details provided upon receiving the email. If you have any questions, call or text Courtney at (825)333-BIDS or email courtney@cozauctions.com.
*Bringing boxes, packing material or additional help for pickups is not necessary, we have everything you will need on site.
The Limoges porcelain sought by collectors today was produced by a number of factories in the Limoges region of France from the late 1700s until around 1930. Production did not cease in 1930, however. This arbitrary cutoff date simply denotes a change in the global economy when styles changed from very elaborate to more basic in design.The Limoges porcelain found most often by collectors in antique malls and shops these days largely represents the American versions of early Limoges, with Haviland being a prominent name. In fact, status-conscious brides often chose Haviland dinnerware sets as their wedding china in the late Victorian period, according to Gaston. Haviland began as an import company specializing in china, appealing to the American market, which differed greatly from European preferences. The company was the first to actually manufacture and decorate china under the same roof in the Limoges region before importing it to the United States. From the mid-nineteenth century to the beginning of the Great Depression, Americans extensively used Haviland Limoges dinnerware on well-set tables. This accounts for so many sets that have been passed down from grandmothers and great-grandmothers to their lucky families

Marseille pattern transferware