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Sheffield and Silverplate

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Sheffield and Silverplate For Sale
Returnable Items Only
12 Christofle Knive Rests, Silver Plated Hand Chased Details
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
A great quality set of knife rests that we always find so practical and pretty for your table setting. These are hand chased from the storied firm o...
Category

1920s French Art Deco Vintage Sheffield and Silverplate

Materials

Silver Plate

Pair of Silver Plate & Cobalt Blue Glass Oil & Vinegar Cruets by Israel Freeman
By Israel Freeman
Located in Philadelphia, PA
A fine matched pair of oil and vinegar cruets in by Israel Freeman. Consisting of silver plate (on copper) bases and cobalt blue glass bottles...
Category

20th Century American Neoclassical Sheffield and Silverplate

Materials

Silver Plate

French Empire Plated Soup Tureen
Located in Torino, IT
A French Sheffield plated Empire soup tureen, round shape with stiff-leaf borders, France, circa 1810.
Category

1810s European Empire Antique Sheffield and Silverplate

Materials

Sheffield Plate

Enamel Cigarette Case with Two Collies
Located in New York, NY
Antique alpaca hinged cigarette case, with enamel reserve. showing two collies. Set off by blue enamel deco lines. C. 1900. 3" x 3 1/2".
Category

Early 20th Century Unknown Sheffield and Silverplate

Materials

Alpaca

Antique and Vintage Sheffield and Silverplate

Sheffield silverplate is a durable combination of thin silver sheets and comparatively thicker sheets of copper that was used to create a variety of household objects for years. On 1stDibs, find a collection of antique and vintage Sheffield silverplate and other silverplate for all of your formal dining and entertaining needs.

A cutler named Thomas Boulsover, who worked for a cutlers company in Sheffield, England, accidentally invented what we now call Sheffield silverplate during the 1700s. While working on a decorative knife for a customer — the metalworkers guild had been tasked with repairing its handle — Boulsover mistakenly overheated the silver and noticed that the knife’s layers of silver and copper melded together, creating an impressive bond. This new material felt like silver but was substantially cheaper. It was then used to produce a variety of serveware, candlesticks, buttons, tea sets and more. For families that couldn’t afford the sterling-silver tureens that were used to serve soup in the upper-class English homes at the time, this was good news. They could impress guests with housewares that looked like sterling silver but actually weren't.

Today, just as pewter collectibles and sterling silver are popular with collectors at neighborhood flea markets, antique Sheffield silverplate housewares are sought after for their appearance and rich history. Sheffield silverplate can command high prices on the secondhand market.

Securing yourself a Sheffield silverplate piece is like acquiring a little bit of history. In order to identify authentic Sheffield silverplate, you need to look for one significant attribute of the material. A metalworker had to ensure that all of the exposed edges of a particular piece had to be covered with a rim of silver. If not, the middle layer, which comprised copper, would show through. This would reveal that the piece was not sterling silver.

Don’t just trot out your matching crystal, silver and porcelain once or twice a year. Make a habit of mixing high and low when setting the table. To pair with your everyday contemporary tableware, find antique and vintage Sheffield silverplate on 1stDibs as well as silverplate by goldsmith and tableware companies such as Christofle, Elkington & Co. and more.

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