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Royal Doulton Lynn

Six Royal Doulton Pottery Side Plates in Lynn Art Deco Pattern D5204, circa 1930
By Royal Doulton
Located in Lincoln, Lincolnshire
by Royal Doulton, England in the early 1930s. The plates are circular and made from Earthenware
Category

Mid-20th Century English Art Deco Platters and Serveware

Materials

Pottery

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Frank Brangwyn Royal Doulton Art Deco Harvest Pattern Cup & Saucer
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A stylish and scarce Art Deco Royal Doulton cup and saucer decorated in a harvest pattern by renowned Welsh artist Sir Frank William Brangwyn (Belgian, 1867-1956) and dating from aro...
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Vintage 1930s English Art Deco Tea Sets

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Vintage Royal Albert 12 Place Tea & Coffee Service Set Mid 20th Century
Located in London, GB
This is a wonderful vintage 50 piece tea, coffee service by Royal Albert China, the design is called Old Country Roses, Circa 1960 in date. It is beautifully made of fine bone chi...
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Vintage 1960s English Porcelain

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Signed Art Deco Doulton Vase with Flambe Glaze in Red and Gold
By Fred Moore, Royal Doulton
Located in Los Angeles, CA
An English Royal Doulton Flambe vase signed by Frederick Moore, circa 1920s-early 1930s. The tall art pottery vase from the Art Deco period is decorated with a glossy flambé glaze of...
Category

20th Century British Art Deco Vases

Materials

Earthenware, Ceramic, Pottery

57 Pc Royal Doulton Regal Crest H5221 English Bone China Dinnerware Set, 1993
By Royal Doulton
Located in Dayton, OH
57 piece Royal Doulton fine bone china dinnerware set in pattern H5221 – Regal Crest. Measures: 8 teacups - 3.5” x 3” / oval platter - 13.5” x 10.5” x 1.25” / 12 dinner plates - 1...
Category

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Materials

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10 Pc English Hammersley & Co Rose Point Strawberry Basket Tea Serving Set
By Hammersley, Shelley Pottery
Located in Dayton, OH
#38183 Vintage 10 piece serving set by Hammersley & Company. White bone china with gilded details. Set includes handled serving tray with creamer and sugar bowl in the Rose Point pa...
Category

Late 20th Century Serving Pieces

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Beswick Pottery, Art Deco Satin-Matt Sherbet Palette Glaze Carved Globe Vase
By Beswick
Located in Frome, GB
This striking and highly-tactile work of Art Deco design is by British company Beswick Pottery. The form of this piece is clean and elegant, following the classic design principles o...
Category

Vintage 1930s British Art Deco Vases

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Royal Doulton Porcelain Sung Ware Noke Flambe Squat Form Vase, 1947
By Royal Doulton
Located in Gardena, CA
Royal Doulton Porcelain Sung Ware Noke Flambe Squat Form Vase, 1947 Lobed panels with vibrant purple, yellow, green, and blue abstract colors to the bright red base. Royal Doulton...
Category

20th Century Vases

Materials

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Royal Doulton Old Colony Salad & Bread Plate Dinnerware Set, 12 Pieces
By Royal Doulton
Located in New York, NY
A set of 12 salad and bread plates by Royal Doulton in the Old Colony pattern. Includes 6 salad plates and 6 bread plates. Size: Salad plates, 8 inches wide; bread plates 6-1/8...
Category

1990s English Dinner Plates

Materials

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Set of 12 Royal Doulton Porcelain Dinner Plates #2559, Green Lace and Gilt
By Royal Doulton
Located in Gardena, CA
Set of 12 Royal Doulton Porcelain dinner plates #2559, green Lace & Gilt Gilt with green lace formed trim on white ground. Pattern #2559. Marked for Royal Doulton on underside. ...
Category

20th Century Dinner Plates

Materials

Porcelain

Royal Doulton Orchard Hill Dinnerware Set
By Royal Doulton
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Royal Doulton orchard hill pattern (discontinued) dinnerware set. Set includes 12 dinner plates, 12 salad plates, 12 dessert plates, 12 bowls, 12 teacups and saucers, 2 serving platt...
Category

20th Century English Tableware

Materials

Porcelain

Set of 8 Plus One Lilactime by Royal Doulton Dinner Service Plates
By Royal Daulton
Located in Lambertville, NJ
Set of 8 plus One Lilactime by ROYAL DOULTON Dinner Service Plates. White Scrolls On Lilac Band. 10 3/4” in diameter. This is a discontinued pattern. Great condition
Category

Late 20th Century English Dinner Plates

Materials

Porcelain

Early Marbro Urn Lamps with Green Painted Roman Ruins - a Pair
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This early pair of Marbro urn table lamps feature beautiful Roman ruins, trees, plants and grasses. The urns are most likely Italian. They retain their original mogul base sockets (E...
Category

Vintage 1950s Italian Hollywood Regency Table Lamps

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Royal Doulton Jardinière on Stand
By Royal Daulton
Located in Norwood, NJ
Art Deco Royal Doulton fully marked jardinière on stand. Dark cobalt blue with green and brown ground and pink flowers. Planter on stand from the early 20th century. Planter opening ...
Category

Vintage 1920s English Art Deco Planters and Jardinieres

Materials

Ceramic

Rare Mason's Ironstone Fenton Jug or pitcher in Tree Peony Pattern, Circa 1840
By Mason's Ironstone
Located in Lincoln, Lincolnshire
This is a good ironstone pottery jug or pitcher made by Mason's, of Lane Delph, Staffordshire, England, circa 1840. The shape, pattern and base markings are all rare. This jug ha...
Category

Antique Mid-19th Century English Chinoiserie Ceramics

Materials

Ironstone

Vintage Saucing Jug, English, Ceramic, Decorative, Condiment Pot, Mid Century
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is a vintage saucing jug. An English, ceramic decorative condiment pot, dating to the mid 20th century, circa 1950. Charmingly decorative serving jug, adding colour to the di...
Category

Mid-20th Century British Serving Pieces

Materials

Ceramic

"Elegant Still Life of Cups with Stripes" Lavender, turquoise, white, gold, tan
By Olga Antonova
Located in Wellesley, MA
"Elegant Still Life of Cups with Stripes" Oil on Canvas, 24 x 36 Inches. Complex composition of multiple cups and a jar in sparkling gold, lavender, turquoise, green, silver pink, b...
Category

2010s Realist Still-life Paintings

Materials

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Royal Doulton for sale on 1stDibs

The redoubtable British ceramics maker Royal Doulton has long embraced popular tastes and enjoys a devoted following among aficionados of English pottery. Some are drawn to the company’s intricately decorated bone china dinner services; others are passionate collectors of Royal Doulton’s artfully hand-painted figurines, vases and bowls.

When founded by John Doulton, Martha Jones and John Watts in 1815, in the Lambeth section of suburban London, the manufacturer produced bottles and other storage containers and even sewer pipes in stoneware, a cheap but durable cousin of porcelain. Amid the Victorian era’s rising concern for hygiene, food safety and sanitation, the company flourished. During the late 1850s — having rebranded as Doulton & Watts and then Doulton and Co. — the firm was colloquially referred to as Doulton Ware. And in the late 1870s, it expanded its business into the applied arts.

The firm took over a factory in Staffordshire, in northern England — the traditional home of British ceramics manufacturing — to produce tableware. Around the same time, Doulton opened an art pottery studio in Lambeth, where vases, urns and other forms were decorated with painted scenic images, flowers or historical motifs. 

Taking a cue from the venerable Meissen porcelain workshops in Germany, Doulton artisans began crafting figurines modeled on characters from literature and theater. The firm also helped popularize Toby Jugs and other “character mugs” — handled cups shaped as the heads of figures from folklore and popular culture. Doulton purchased a factory in Burslem in 1882, and King Edward VII granted the factory his Royal Warrant in 1901.

Royal Doulton china will always make an elegant yet not-too-formal appearance in a traditional table setting. Prices for dinner services vary according to size, age and condition, but generally range from $2,000 to $15,000

Authentic Royal Doulton art pottery might be used by some as a bright decorative note; others collect the company’s figurines with the same interest and dedication as stamp and coin enthusiasts. A typical Toby Jug might fetch $50, while very rare figurines can sell for $7,000. Most of the finest Royal Doulton art pottery pieces sell for around $500

As you will see on these pages, few decorative-arts companies are as aesthetically and stylistically diverse as Royal Doulton. The firm truly offers something for everyone.

Find Royal Doulton figurines, plates, vases and other collectibles for sale on 1stDibs.

A Close Look at art-deco Furniture

Art Deco furniture is characterized by its celebration of modern life. More than its emphasis on natural wood grains and focus on traditional craftsmanship, vintage Art Deco dining chairs, tables, desks, cabinets and other furniture — which typically refers to pieces produced during the 1920s and 1930s — is an ode to the glamour of the “Roaring Twenties.” 

ORIGINS OF ART DECO FURNITURE DESIGN

CHARACTERISTICS OF ART DECO FURNITURE DESIGN

  • Bold geometric lines and forms, floral motifs
  • Use of expensive materials such as shagreen or marble as well as exotic woods such as mahogany, ebony and zebra wood
  • Metal accents, shimmering mirrored finishes
  • Embellishments made from exotic animal hides, inlays of mother-of-pearl or ivory

ART DECO FURNITURE DESIGNERS TO KNOW

VINTAGE ART DECO FURNITURE ON 1STDIBS

Few design styles are as universally recognized and appreciated as Art Deco. The term alone conjures visions of the Roaring Twenties, Machine Age metropolises, vast ocean liners, sleek typography and Prohibition-era hedonism. The iconic movement made an indelible mark on all fields of design throughout the 1920s and ’30s, celebrating society’s growing industrialization with refined elegance and stunning craftsmanship.

Widely known designers associated with the Art Deco style include Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann, Eileen Gray, Maurice Dufrêne, Paul Follot and Jules Leleu.

The term Art Deco derives from the name of a large decorative arts exhibition held in Paris in 1925. “Art Deco design” is often used broadly, to describe the work of creators in associated or ancillary styles. This is particularly true of American Art Deco, which is also called Streamline Moderne or Machine Age design. (Streamline Moderne, sometimes known as Art Moderne, was a phenomenon largely of the 1930s, post–Art Nouveau.)

Art Deco textile designers employed dazzling floral motifs and vivid colors, and while Art Deco furniture makers respected the dark woods and modern metals with which they worked, they frequently incorporated decorative embellishments such as exotic animal hides as well as veneers in their seating, case pieces, living room sets and bedroom furniture.

From mother-of-pearl inlaid vitrines to chrome aviator chairs, bold and inventive works in the Art Deco style include chaise longues (also known as chaise lounges) and curved armchairs. Today, the style is still favored by interior designers looking to infuse a home with an air of luxury and sophistication.

The vintage Art Deco furniture for sale on 1stDibs includes dressers, coffee tables, decorative objects and more.

Finding the Right ceramics for You

Whether you’re adding an eye-catching mid-century modern glazed stoneware bowl to your dining table or grouping a collection of decorative plates by color for the shelving in your living room, decorating and entertaining with antique and vintage ceramics is a great way to introduce provocative pops of colors and textures to a space or family meals.

Ceramics, which includes pottery such as earthenware and stoneware, has had meaningful functional value in civilizations all over the world for thousands of years. When people began to populate permanent settlements during the Neolithic era, which saw the rapid growth of agriculture and farming, clay-based ceramics were fired in underground kilns and played a greater role as important containers for dry goods, water, art objects and more.

Today, if an Art Deco floor vase, adorned in bright polychrome glazed colors with flowers and geometric patterns, isn’t your speed, maybe minimalist ceramics can help you design a room that’s both timeless and of the moment. Mixing and matching can invite conversation and bring spirited contrasts to your outdoor dining area. The natural-world details enameled on an Art Nouveau vase might pair well with the sleek simplicity of a modern serving bowl, for example.

In your kitchen, your cabinets are likely filled with ceramic dinner plates. You’re probably serving daily meals on stoneware dishes or durable sets of porcelain or bone china, while decorative ceramic dishes may be on display in your dining room. Perhaps you’ve anchored a group of smaller pottery pieces on your mantelpiece with some taller vases and vessels, or a console table in your living room is home to an earthenware bowl with a decorative seasonal collection of leaves, greenery and acorns.

Regardless of your tastes, however, it’s possible that ceramics are already in use all over your home and outdoor space. If not, why? Whatever your needs may be, find a wide range of antique and vintage ceramics on 1stDibs.