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Snuff Boxes Boxes Kpm

KPM Shell and Flower Motif Cabinet or Patch Box
By KPM Porcelain
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
KPM shell and flower motif cabinet or patch box, The top realistically modelled as a clam shell
Category

Antique Late 19th Century German Snuff Boxes and Tobacco Boxes

Materials

Porcelain

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Ormolu and Sèvres Style Porcelain Mounted Clock Set in the Louis XVI Manner
By Charles Le Roy
Located in London, GB
A clock garniture in the Louis XVI Manner By Le Roy et Fils The ormolu clock case and accompanying candelabra dressed with blue 'Sevres' style hand decorated polychrome panels to...
Category

Antique 19th Century French Louis XVI Mantel Clocks

Materials

Ormolu, Bronze

American Cut Glass and Silver Tobacco Jar
By Bailey, Banks & Biddle
Located in New Orleans, LA
This resplendent tobacco jar by Bailey, Banks & Biddle of Philadelphia features a beautiful sterling silver lid atop a body of elegant cut-to-clear glass. The lid is adorned with a w...
Category

Antique Late 19th Century American Other Snuff Boxes and Tobacco Boxes

Materials

Sterling Silver

Marie Antionette Style Limoge Box
By Limoges
Located in Asheville, NC
Beautiful porcelain Limoges box hand-painted rose flowerettes adorned with painted gold designs and gold hardware.
Category

Antique 18th Century and Earlier French Jewelry Boxes

Marie Antionette Style Limoge Box
Marie Antionette Style Limoge Box
H 2 in W 4 in D 2.75 in
Limoges Porcelain Tableware, 56 Pieces
Located in Beuzevillette, FR
Beautiful Limoges porcelain tableware with floral decoration and gilding comprising 56 pieces: 24 flat plates, 10 small plates, 12 soup plates, one soup tureen or vegetable dish , on...
Category

Mid-20th Century French Platters and Serveware

Materials

Porcelain

Antique Limoges Hand-Painted Flowers Porcelain Vase Estate France
By Limoges
Located in Montreal, QC
Limoges porcelain pillow vase the perfect answer to decorating a narrow space, such as mantel place. Hand-painted floral and Cacti decoration. The handles add to the beauty and balan...
Category

Antique 1880s French Victorian Vases

Materials

Porcelain

Colorful Antique Hobbs Drinking Glasses in Blue and Pink, Set of 3 1800s
By Hobbs & Co.
Located in Oklahoma City, OK
A set of three Hobbs drinking glasses in seaweed blue, ruby, and flashed cranberry. This vintage hard-to-find set of three will make a great addition to a bar. Made in the 1890s. ...
Category

Antique 1890s American Victorian Barware

Materials

Glass

Unique Porcelain Ram Sculpture by Camille Tharaud for Limoges
By L.F. Limoges, Camille Tharaud
Located in San Diego, CA
Beautiful, small porcelain ram sculpture made in France by Limoges. The piece is signed by Camille Tharaud and is in excellent condition. #251
Category

20th Century French Art Deco Animal Sculptures

Materials

Porcelain

Pair Antique French Blue Sèvres Porcelain Ormolu Candelabra, Circa 1870-1880
Located in New Orleans, LA
Pair antique French blue Sèvres Porcelain Ormolu candle holder, Circa 1870-1880.
Category

Antique 19th Century French Candelabras

Materials

Ormolu

Pair of Large Limoges White Porcelain Table Lamps
By Limoges
Located in Chicago, IL
Early 20th century white porcelain Limoges lamp. Swan form handles on a neoclassical urn shaped vase. Limoge mark on underside of each. Uncertain to when this mark was used. I belie...
Category

Early 20th Century French Hollywood Regency Table Lamps

Materials

Porcelain

19th Century French Sevres Porcelain Clock Set
By Manufacture Nationale de Sèvres
Located in Brighton, Sussex
A good quality French, 19th century pink sevres porcelain and gilded ormolu clock set. Having a classical urn to the top, an eight day chiming movement. A romantic scene painted to t...
Category

Antique 19th Century French Mantel Clocks

Materials

Ormolu

Antique Limoges Dinner Plates, Set of 11 with Interesting Swirl Flower Design
By Martial Redon
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
A fabulously decorated antique set of dinner plates by M. Redon, Limoges France. The collar of the plate features an unique swirl design with pastel florals and gilt foliate scrolls....
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Dinner Plates

Materials

Gold

Set of 12 Limoges Gilded Porcelain "Hémisphère" Dessert Plates by J.L. Coquet
Located in New York, NY
This elegant set of twelve (12) dessert plates were realized by the esteemed maker J.L. Coquet of Limoges, France. They feature circular bodies in porcelain with lustrous white cente...
Category

20th Century French Modern Dinner Plates

Materials

Gold

Georges de Feure French Art Nouveau Covered Porcelain Jar
By Georges De Feure
Located in New York, NY
A French Art Nouveau covered porcelain jar designed by Georges De Feure and manufactured by Dufraisseix & Abbot, Limoges, for Art Nouveau Bing. In the manner of de Feure’s renowned t...
Category

Antique 19th Century French Art Nouveau Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic

Limoges Pate sur Pate Porcelain Plaque
Located in Montreal, QC
A Limoges pate sur pate porcelain plaque, depicting a young girl examining a snail which in turn is looking back curiously. Both the child and the snail are very skillfully modeled a...
Category

Antique Late 19th Century French Art Nouveau Wall-mounted Sculptures

Materials

Porcelain

Limoges Pate sur Pate Porcelain Plaque
Limoges Pate sur Pate Porcelain Plaque
H 7.5 in W 12 in D 0.25 in
Pair of Art Nouveau Limoges Porcelain Vases, 19th Century
Located in Paris, FR
Pair of Art Nouveau blue enameled porcelain planters. Each vase presents on two sides, a painting of four young dreamy women, sitting on an outdoor balcony. This scene inserted in tw...
Category

Antique 19th Century French Art Nouveau Urns

Materials

Enamel

French 19th Century Louis XVI Style Belle Époque Period Candelabras
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
A stunning true pair of French 19th century Louis XVI st. Belle Epoque period ormolu and Sèvre sporcelain candelabras. Each seven arm candelabra is raised by a rectangular base with ...
Category

Antique 19th Century French Belle Époque Candelabras

Materials

Ormolu

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KPM Porcelain for sale on 1stDibs

The Königliche Porzellan-Manufaktur Berlin, or KPM (Royal Porcelain Factory, Berlin, in English) was one of the most influential porcelain factories to emerge in 18th-century Germany, along with Nymphenburg and Meissen. KPM was the third incarnation of a company originally founded in 1751 by Wilhelm Caspar Wegely to take advantage of the burgeoning market for “white gold.” On the verge of bankruptcy, Wegely sold his inventory and tools to Johann Ernst Gotzkowsky, who in 1761 established another porcelain factory, which also failed, and was subsequently taken over by Frederick II of Prussia in 1763. Like Augustus II, Elector of Saxony, the patron of Meissen and a keen collector who described himself as suffering (quite happily) from “porcelain sickness,” Frederick II was proud to refer to himself as KPM’s “best customer.” KPM produces china and figurines to this day, and throughout its long history, it has been a style-setter for elegant tableware, particularly in the 1930’s, the period during which their popular patterns Urbino, Urania and Arkadia were designed.

Thanks to its royal patronage, KPM had the resources and contacts necessary to establish itself as a leading luxury producer, and supplied Russian and European elites with tableware in the Rococo and Neoclassical styles, as well as monumental vases, and decorative plaques. Many of these objects can be found today in major museums as a result of Frederick II’s penchant for sending KPM porcelain as diplomatic gifts throughout Europe. Unlike Meissen, which was known for crafting porcelain sculptures of dazzling complexity, KPM is revered for the precision and splendor of its surface decoration, and for its porcelain plaques depicting scenes from history and mythology. One especially lovely example circa 1790 is a neocalssical-style tea service decorated with gold accents and a grisaille design of figures from the ancient world. By contrast, this boldly colorful narrative cup and saucer set from the 1840’s depicts scenes from real life as colorfully as a painting. The set was commissioned by a gentleman for his wife as a tongue-in-cheek gift commemorating her misadventures while in town for a visit to the opera, which resulted in her opera glasses being stolen. The saucer shows the thief and the glasses, and the cup reveals the scene of the crime in vivid hues.

KPM was forced to move from its original location in 1867 due to the building of the new Prussian Parliament building, and this afforded the company the opportunity to to create a new factory with the newest equipment and materials of the day. With the growing popularity of Art Nouveau and the western fascination with Asian ceramics, KPM began formulating glazes that evoked the color palette and rich surfaces of Chinese porcelain. By the turn of the century, KPM was exhibiting its wares to a global audience at international expositions. At the end of World War I with the collapse of the Prussian monarchy, KPM was renamed the State Porcelain Manufactory Berlin, continuing to use the name KPM and its use of the cobalt blue sceptre mark that is painted on the bottom of every piece.

By the late 1920’s, the designers and craftsmen of KPM were inspired by the tenets of Modernism, particularly the styles of the Bauhaus and the Deutscher Werkbund. During this period, the firm’s aim was to produce useful household porcelain for a range of consumers, rather than catering to a small elite. Among the most successful patterns of this era was designer Trude Petri’s Urbino line, which is still produced today. Following World War II, KPM was temporarily housed in the town of Selb, and only returned to its rebuilt quarters in Berlin in 1957. In the 1980s, KPM became an private company independent of the state, and began to focus production on the preservation of historic forms, designs, and techniques. KPM continues to collaborate with designers from all over the world, most recently on the Berlin dinnerware service with designer Enzo Mari, and a collaboration with the luxury brands Bottega Veneta and Bugatti.

Finding the Right decorative-boxes for You

Antique, vintage and new decorative boxes will safely store items while adding a splash of color or texture to a corner in any room. They have had a range of purposes over the years — from trinkets to serving as useful receptacles, such as snuff boxes, jewelry boxes and more. Boxes have also been designed in a range of forms and styles.

Box making is a craft dating back thousands of years. Early boxes as decorative objects were regularly designed and decorated both inside and out, ranging from minimal looks to more flashy styles. Decorative boxes have been constructed from different materials, with wood and metal being the most common. Wood is widely available and versatile, with woodworkers able to carve complex designs or showcase its natural grain.

Some antique jewelry boxes were made with tortoiseshell, mother-of-pearl, ivory and even porcupine quills, such as those created by the Anishinabe in Canada and the United States. In Sri Lanka, well-crafted boxes were inlaid with porcupine quills and ivory discs between ebony bands. Chinese sewing boxes and tea boxes made of black lacquer were popular in Europe during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. These often featured gold-painted designs or landscape scenes. Silk, paper and velvet frequently enhanced these boxes’ interiors.

Any style of decorative box can be a nice tabletop or desktop decor, whether to hold candy or tea in the living room or paper, pencils and other business supplies in the office. They can also act as jewelry boxes. Sewing boxes can be a lovely touch to any space while storing magazines or other trinkets.

You can find metal, wood and silver antique boxes on 1stDibs. The collection includes mid-century modern, Victorian and Art Deco styles that can add elegance to any home.