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Silverplate Holloware

Juarez Alameda Sterling Silver Holloware Set Coffe Pot Creamer Sugar Vintage
Located in Sherman Oaks, CA
A gorgeous antique vintage sterling silver coffee set Includes coffee pot, creamer, and sugar Made in Mexico by Juarez Alameda Coffee Pot: 10 3/4" Tall Total Mass = 1237.7 grams
Category

20th Century Mexican Artisan Coffee and Tea Sets

Materials

Sterling Silver

Recent Sales

Kalo Shop Hand-Wrought Arts & Crafts Design Sterling Set of Eight Salad Forks
Located in BLOOMINGTON,, MN
classic holloware, jewelry and flatware. The Kalo Shop had critical influence in the Arts & Crafts
Category

Vintage 1910s American Arts and Crafts Flatware and Serving Pieces

CC. Hermann Denmark Sterling Silver and Ebony Handle Serving Set
Located in Fuquay Varina, NC
CC. Hermann sterling silver holloware set with tray from Denmark with ebony wood handle and no
Category

Early 20th Century Danish Serving Bowls and Tureens

Materials

Sterling Silver

GEORG JENSEN Centerpiece Bowl no. 468A
By Georg Jensen
Located in San Francisco, CA
famous for his Cactus Pattern cutlery. Albertus also designed many pieces of jewelry and Holloware and
Category

Danish Centerpieces and Tazzas

GEORG JENSEN Covered Dish No. 228
By Georg Jensen
Located in San Francisco, CA
ever seen. A similar example can be seen in the book GEORG JENSEN HOLLOWARE, The Silver Fund
Category

20th Century Danish Serving Bowls and Tureens

Materials

Sterling Silver

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Finding the Right Silver, Flatware and Silverplate for You

While early utensils were often shaped from clay, wood or bone, silversmiths later crafted flatware from precious metal. In the 19th century, mass production of electroplated flatware made silver utensils accessible to the middle class. Now, antique and vintage silver, flatware and silver-plate objects for dining and the home are heritage pieces reflecting this history of design.

Silver spoons were so prized in 15th-century England that people would travel with the valuable utensils. Forks in the 17th century were frequently made with steel and likewise only available to the upper class. Silver flatware continued to be produced in small workshops in the 18th century and was a luxury reserved for the elite. When George I came to the throne in 1714, the silver dining service — including plates, dishes, soup tureens, chargers and sauceboats — became all-important.

Innovative manufacturing techniques such as the electroplating process in the 19th century would transform silversmithing with industrialization. Sheffield plate was used from 1750 to 1880 and involved a fusion method to fabricate everything from knife handles to serveware. French industrial chemist Henri de Ruolz discovered a gilding and silver-plating process for metals in 1841, with the silver-like results so celebrated that Napoleon III ordered a 3,000-piece flatware set. The expansion of table service in the Victorian era also led to an increasing number of flatware and serving pieces in a canteen, or cutlery chest, all with specific uses, from toast forks to butter picks.

While affordable metal flatware is widely available today, historic brands including Gorham Manufacturing Company — whose legendary contribution to the history of silver making started in 1831 — and Christofle continue the tradition of silver and silver-plate flatware.

Browse 1stDibs for both antique and contemporary silver, flatware and silver-plate objects in a range of elegant designs to enhance your dining table.