London - Serving Bowls
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Item Ships From: London
Jens Harald Quistgaard Wenge Board
By Jens Quistgaard
Located in London, GB
A very rare platter - presentation/cutting or cheese board by Jens Harald Quistgaard. Beautifully turned Wenge timber with circular raised centre in squared end grain and concave bas...
Category
Mid-20th Century Danish Mid-Century Modern London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Wenge
Minton Pair of Oval Dishes, Newcastle Embossed, Flowers J. Bancroft, 1857
By Minton
Located in London, GB
This is a stunning pair of oval dishes made by Minton in 1857. The dishes are beautifully moulded in the Newcastle Embossed shape, the moulding picked out and turquoise and gilt, and...
Category
1850s English Victorian Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Large Antique Victorian Silver Dish Ring and Bowl 1900 Georgian Irish Style
By William Comyns
Located in London, GB
A magnificent Antique Victorian Silver Dish Ring with matching Bowl / Dish created in the typical antique Irish Georgian Silver Dish Rings. This a particularly fine example with a go...
Category
Early 20th Century English Georgian London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Sterling Silver
Derby Pair of Porcelain Ice Pails, Fine Flowers by William Billingsley, ca 1790
By Derby, William Billingsly
Located in London, GB
This is a pair of spectacular porcelain ice pails made by the Derby Porcelain Company in about 1790 and decorated with pattern 80, which consists of very fine flowers by the famous p...
Category
1790s English George III Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Liberty and Co. An English Pewter 0966 Arts and Crafts milk and sugar bowl
By Liberty & Co.
Located in London, GB
Liberty and Co. Stamped Made in England. English Pewter 0966. An Arts and Crafts milk and sugar bowl. Circa 1905. Price for the pair.
Category
Early 1900s English Arts and Crafts Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Pewter
Midcentury Decorative Ceramic Bowl by Albert Thiry, circa 1960s
By Albert Thiry
Located in London, GB
Midcentury decorative ceramic bowl (circa 1960s) by Albert Thiry (1932-2009). A Classic Thiry design and decoration scheme, this bowl's base co...
Category
1960s French Mid-Century Modern Vintage London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Ceramic
Samuel Alcock Pair of Low Comports, Grey, Gilt with Landscapes, Flowers, ca 1859
By Samuel Alcock & Co.
Located in London, GB
This is a rather stunning pair of one-handled low comports with pierced rims, a warm grey ground with elaborate gilt foliage, three very fine flower reserves each, and a large mounta...
Category
1850s English Rococo Revival Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Samuel Alcock Low Oval Comport Dish, Sage Green with Landscape, ca 1850
By Samuel Alcock & Co.
Located in London, GB
An oval low-footed comport with two handles and an octagonally scrolled shape, a moulded surface with pale yellow and white scrolling foliage on a sage green ground, and a stunning l...
Category
1850s English Victorian Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Samuel Alcock Footed Comport, Melted Snow, Periwinkle Lilac, Flowers, ca 1822
By Samuel Alcock & Co.
Located in London, GB
A footed rectangular central comport or centre piece, periwinkle / lilac ground with melted snow and holly leaf borders and flowers, a large pink wild rose painting...
Category
1820s English Regency Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Samuel Alcock Footed Porcelain Sauce Tureen, Maroon with Flower Sprays, ca 1842
By Samuel Alcock & Co.
Located in London, GB
A footed two-handled sauce tureen with cover, maroon and pale yellow ground with beautiful hand painted flower sprays on lower part of body; twisted handles and a petticoat stem
Pat...
Category
1840s English Rococo Revival Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Derby Kidney Dish, William Quaker Pegg, Scarlet Lychnis & Gentianella, c1814
By Quaker Pegg At Derby, Derby
Located in London, GB
This is a stunning and extremely rare kidney shaped serving dish made by Derby between about 1813 and 1815. The dish is painted with bright red and blue flowers by William Quaker Peg...
Category
1810s English Regency Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Minton Pair of Rectangular Dishes, Newcastle Embossed, Flowers J. Bancroft, 1857
By Samuel Alcock & Co.
Located in London, GB
This is a stunning pair of rectangular dishes made by Minton in 1857. The dishes are beautifully moulded in the Newcastle Embossed shape, the moulding picked out and turquoise and gi...
Category
1850s English Rococo Revival Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Carl Deffner. An early Secessionist style copper and brass punch bowl and lid
By Carl Deffner
Located in London, GB
Carl Deffner, Esslingen, Germany. An early Secessionist style copper and brass punch bowl and lid with original green glass liner and a ladle. Carl De...
Category
Early 1900s German Vienna Secession Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Brass, Copper
Pair of Coalport Porcelain Lozenge Dishes, Birds & Flowers Patt.759, 1815-1820
By Coalport Porcelain
Located in London, GB
This is a spectacular pair of oval dishes made by Coalport between 1815 and 1820. The dishes bear the famous and very wonderful bird pattern with the number 759. Panels with stunning hand painted birds and flowers are set in a cobalt blue background with rich gilt decoration.
We also have two plates available in this pattern; please see separate listings. This pattern is very desired and doesn't come to the market often, so this is a rare opportunity.
Coalport was one of the leading potters in 19th and 20th Century Staffordshire. They worked alongside other great potters such as Spode, Davenport and Minton, and came out with many innovative designs. When we say "Coalport" we usually think of the one Coalport factory that became famous, but in its beginning years there were two factories, one run by John Rose and the other by his brother Thomas Rose. Thomas Rose went into partnership with Robert Anstice and Robert Horton and they were located directly opposite John Rose, across the canal. The brothers' factories had much in common with each other and they shared many different shapes and patterns. Ultimately, the John Rose factory proved more profitable and John Rose bought Thomas' factory in 1814, making it the one Coalport factory that became so famous. Many of the Coalport items, of either factory, are now collectors' items.
The stunning thing about pattern 759 is that each bird is different, as well as each flower formation. All birds and flowers are painted carefully in their own colours; they are all different species. Each bird is an individual with its own expression; in fact I once had a large dinner service...
Category
1810s English Regency Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Chelsea-Derby Round Dish, Turquoise with Fine Pink Rose Garlands, ca 1775
By Chelsea-Derby
Located in London, GB
This is a beautiful and rare porcelain round serving dish made by Chelsea-Derby in about 1775. The dish is round and pleasingly lobed, and is decorated in a turquoise rim with gilt a...
Category
1770s English George III Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Worcester Pair of Shell Dishes, French Green Stencil Pattern, ca 1770
By 1st Period Worcester Dr. Wall
Located in London, GB
This is a pair of very rare and beautiful shell dishes made by Worcester around 1770 in their 1st or "Dr Wall" period. The dishes have one scrolled handle and have a shell-like shape...
Category
1770s English Georgian Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Christofle Silver Plated Caviar Bowl in Original Box, c. 1980
By Christofle
Located in London, GB
A superb vintage silver plated caviar bowl with glass insert made by Christofle of Paris c. 1980, presented in its original box.
This caviar set consists of four pieces: a large (1...
Category
Late 20th Century French Hollywood Regency London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver Plate
Large 19th Century Spanish Earthenware Splatter Nijar Bowl
Located in London, GB
A large 19th century earthenware bowl with off-white/multicoloured painterly glaze. Typical ceramic work of Nijar, Province of Almeria - Andalusia. Spanish, c. 1870.
Note: Not dishw...
Category
19th Century Spanish Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Earthenware
Chamberlains Worcester Porcelain Dish, Nelson or Fine Old Japan pattern, ca 1805
By Chamberlains Worcester
Located in London, GB
This is a striking square serving dish made by Chamberlains in Worcester around 1805. The dish bears the Fine Old Japan pattern, often called the Nelson pattern.
Robert Chamberlai...
Category
Early 1800s English Georgian Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Chinese Export Silver Bowl
By Luen Hing
Located in London, GB
A Chinese Silver Bowl on plain round pedestal base. The decoration comprises of two applied opposing dragons against a plain background. Marked LH, for Luen Hing, a retailer based in...
Category
Early 1900s Chinese Chinese Export Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver
Spode Porcelain Shell Dish, Orange and Gilt Neoclassical Design, ca 1810
By Spode
Located in London, GB
This is a gorgeous dessert serving dish, or "shell dish", made by Spode in about 1810, which was the Regency era. The dish has a beautiful Neoclassical pattern of gilt details on an ...
Category
1810s English Neoclassical Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Antique English Sterling Silver George II Basket
Located in London, GB
A George II sterling silver bread basket, London 1750 by Samuel Herbert & Co
Of shaped oval form in the Rococo style, all raised upon a cast scallop shell and C scroll foot. The rim...
Category
1750s English George II Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver, Sterling Silver
Art Nouveau Silver Centerpiece
Located in London, GB
This stylish and beautiful centrepiece was made in Germany, circa 1900. It is a wonderful example of Art Nouveau, and the organic form ensures that, like an interesting sculpture, it...
Category
Early 20th Century German Art Nouveau London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver
Bloor Derby Shell Dish, White, Floral Sprigs Moses Webster, Regency, 1820-1825
By Bloor Derby
Located in London, GB
This is a beautiful one-handled dessert serving dish or "shell" dish made by Derby between about 1820 and 1825 in the Regency era and decorated by Moses Webster. These dishes were to...
Category
1820s English Regency Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Worcester Pierced Porcelain Basket, Blue Scale Japanese Kakiemon, circa 1765
By 1st Period Worcester Dr. Wall
Located in London, GB
This is a rare and beautiful porcelain basket made by Worcester circa 1765 in their 1st or "Dr Wall" period. These baskets were used for dinners or desserts to serve fruit or bread. The basket is decorated in the famous "blue scale" ground with very fine Japanese Kakiemon...
Category
1760s English George III Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
'Karelia' Porcelain Leaf-Pattern Dish by Tapio Wirkkala for Rosenthal, 1970s
By Tapio Wirkkala, Rosenthal
Located in London, GB
Tapio Wirkkala for Rosenthal, c. 1970
‘Karelia’ leaf-pattern dish
White porcelain
Very good condition with only very minor marks
Dimensions, approx..:
lenght 28cm, width 9cm...
Category
1970s Finnish Mid-Century Modern Vintage London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Ceramic
Flight Barr & Barr Berry Bowl, Roses and Thistles by W. Billingsley, 1813
By Barr, Flight & Barr Worcester, William Billingsly, Flight, Barr & Barr Worcester
Located in London, GB
This is a beautiful berry bowl made by Flight Barr & Barr probably in the year 1813. The dish is decorated with a beautiful continuous border of hand painted roses and thistles by th...
Category
1810s English Regency Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Derby Lobed Dish, Camden Service, William Billingsley Roses on Green, 1795 (1)
By Derby
Located in London, GB
This is a very rare oval lobed dish from the famous "Earl of Camden" service made by the Derby Porcelain Company in 1795. The service was painted with typical English roses by William Billingsley, one of Britain's most famous painters, and responsible for exactly this type of rose painting on British porcelain.
There are more items available in this pattern, see separate listings. To keep these items together we'd be happy to offer a discount on multiple purchases - please ask!
The Derby Porcelain Company, later called Royal Crown Derby, is currently the oldest British porcelain factory still in production. The Derby pottery was one of the most prominent potteries right from the start of English porcelain production in the mid 1700s to today, and the factory went through many iterations. In the 1820s, it was called "Bloor Derby" as it came under the ownership of Robert Bloor; this factory later closed but its legacy was continued under the ownership of a group of employees, and later this was merged into a new factory called Royal Crown Derby, which is still in operation today and still carries forward some of the oldest patterns that have made it famous over the centuries.
William Billingsley was a brilliant but notoriously difficult man who left behind a trail of debts, broken hearts and mystery - but he was also one of the most important people in the history British porcelain. Billingsley revolutionised the way British decorators painted flowers; he added a freedom and artistry that now singles out British flower painting, and he created a new technique for painting roses, which you can see in this design. Billingsley worked at Derby, Worcester and Mansfield. He also set up his own potteries in Pinxton and Nantgarw and created some of the best porcelain ever made, but racking up great debts, before running off in the dead of night and ending his days at Coalport painting flowers.
Items painted by William Billingsley are rare and very much in demand - together with Thomas Baxter's work they are probably among the most desired pieces of British porcelain.
The Earl of Camden service was a huge service ordered by Lady Camden in 1795. It had to be produced under great, and unrealistic, time pressure and was notoriously late, much to Lady Camden's chagrin. She wanted the service to be produced by only the best artisans and therefore William Billingsley was tasked with painting all items - but it is thought that when it was clear the deadline was impossible to make, he enlisted the help of John Brewer for some of the last items, such as the ice pails. This plate shows the typical "Billingsley" roses: a beautiful naturally flowing garland of English roses interspersed with buds, trailing around a crisp gilt ribbon. The way the roses link into each other, the way each individual one is completely different, the light effects achieved by rubbing out some of the pink paint, and the very fine buds and foliage all point to these being from Billingsley's hand.
This dish came together with a plate that bears labels that point to a rich provenance: the Doris Wheatley Collection, the Daniel Collection, Derek Gardner...
Category
1790s English George III Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Art Nouveau Silver Centerpiece
Located in London, GB
This stylish and beautiful centrepiece was made in Germany, circa 1900. It is a wonderful example of Art Nouveau, and the organic form ensures that, like an interesting sculpture, it...
Category
Early 20th Century German Art Nouveau London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver
Russian Silver Gilt and Cloisonné Enamel Kovsch
Located in London, GB
The silver gilt kovsch decorated in cloisonné enamel with a pattern of leaves and flowers, set with polished gemstones, marks to the underside.
The kovsch is a traditional Russian drinking...
Category
20th Century Russian London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver, Enamel
Antique George I Sterling Silver Porringer / Bleeding Bowl 1717
Located in London, GB
A classic antique George I solid Silver Porringer / Bleeding Bowl with a substantial shaped handle. The handle has an engrave monogram R over RM. The bow...
Category
Early 18th Century English George I Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Sterling Silver
Georg Jensen Danish Sterling Silver Vegetable Tureen Dish & Cover 228H 1945-77
By Georg Jensen
Located in London, GB
A magnificent Danish Lidded Silver Vegetable Dish with a removable divider insert by Georg Jensen. The Rim of the Tureen has a repeating stylised floral pattern around the rim and th...
Category
Mid-20th Century Danish London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Sterling Silver
Pair Vintage Sterling Silver Georg Jensen Bowls Pattern 197B 1960 / 63
By Georg Jensen
Located in London, GB
A pair of elegant Sterling Silver Bowls in classic Jensen design pattern 197B. The pair of Bowls are supported on berry and leaf design colons and the bodies of each bowl features a ...
Category
20th Century Danish London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Sterling Silver
Caughley Dish, Harlequin Pattern in Style of Donegall Service, ca 1793
By Chamberlains Worcester, Caughley Porcelain
Located in London, GB
This is a beautiful and intriguing porcelain dish made by Caughley and decorated at Chamberlains Worcester in or shortly after 1793. The dish has a "harlequin" pattern with six diffe...
Category
1790s English Neoclassical Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Derby Square Dish, Camden Service, William Billingsley Roses on Green, 1795
By Derby
Located in London, GB
This is a very rare square dish from the famous "Earl of Camden" service made by the Derby Porcelain Company in 1795. The service was painted with typical English roses by William Billingsley, one of Britain's most famous painters, and responsible for exactly this type of rose painting on British porcelain.
There are more items available in this pattern, see separate listings. To keep these items together we'd be happy to offer a discount on multiple purchases - please ask!
The Derby Porcelain Company, later called Royal Crown Derby, is currently the oldest British porcelain factory still in production. The Derby pottery was one of the most prominent potteries right from the start of English porcelain production in the mid 1700s to today, and the factory went through many iterations. In the 1820s, it was called "Bloor Derby" as it came under the ownership of Robert Bloor; this factory later closed but its legacy was continued under the ownership of a group of employees, and later this was merged into a new factory called Royal Crown Derby, which is still in operation today and still carries forward some of the oldest patterns that have made it famous over the centuries.
William Billingsley was a brilliant but notoriously difficult man who left behind a trail of debts, broken hearts and mystery - but he was also one of the most important people in the history British porcelain. Billingsley revolutionised the way British decorators painted flowers; he added a freedom and artistry that now singles out British flower painting, and he created a new technique for painting roses, which you can see in this design. Billingsley worked at Derby, Worcester and Mansfield. He also set up his own potteries in Pinxton and Nantgarw and created some of the best porcelain ever made, but racking up great debts, before running off in the dead of night and ending his days at Coalport painting flowers.
Items painted by William Billingsley are rare and very much in demand - together with Thomas Baxter's work they are probably among the most desired pieces of British porcelain.
The Earl of Camden service was a huge service ordered by Lady Camden in 1795. It had to be produced under great, and unrealistic, time pressure and was notoriously late, much to Lady Camden's chagrin. She wanted the service to be produced by only the best artisans and therefore William Billingsley was tasked with painting all items - but it is thought that when it was clear the deadline was impossible to make, he enlisted the help of John Brewer for some of the last items, such as the ice pails. This plate shows the typical "Billingsley" roses: a beautiful naturally flowing garland of English roses interspersed with buds, trailing around a crisp gilt ribbon. The way the roses link into each other, the way each individual one is completely different, the light effects achieved by rubbing out some of the pink paint, and the very fine buds and foliage all point to these being from Billingsley's hand.
This dish came together with a plate that bears labels that point to a rich provenance: the Doris Wheatley Collection, the Daniel Collection, Derek Gardner...
Category
1790s English George III Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Vintage French Ceramic Tureen by Roger Capron, 'circa 1960s'
By Roger Capron
Located in London, GB
Vintage French ceramic tureen by Roger Capron (circa 1960s). A luscious creamy white base with subtle grey-blue hues in the repeating décor patte...
Category
1960s French Mid-Century Modern Vintage London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Ceramic
Derby Oval Dish, Camden Service, William Billingsley Roses on Green, 1795 (2)
By Derby
Located in London, GB
This is a very rare oval lobed dish from the famous "Earl of Camden" service made by the Derby Porcelain Company in 1795. The service was painted with typical English roses by William Billingsley, one of Britain's most famous painters, and responsible for exactly this type of rose painting on British porcelain.
There are more items available in this pattern, see separate listings. To keep these items together we'd be happy to offer a discount on multiple purchases - please ask!
The Derby Porcelain Company, later called Royal Crown Derby, is currently the oldest British porcelain factory still in production. The Derby pottery was one of the most prominent potteries right from the start of English porcelain production in the mid 1700s to today, and the factory went through many iterations. In the 1820s, it was called "Bloor Derby" as it came under the ownership of Robert Bloor; this factory later closed but its legacy was continued under the ownership of a group of employees, and later this was merged into a new factory called Royal Crown Derby, which is still in operation today and still carries forward some of the oldest patterns that have made it famous over the centuries.
William Billingsley was a brilliant but notoriously difficult man who left behind a trail of debts, broken hearts and mystery - but he was also one of the most important people in the history British porcelain. Billingsley revolutionised the way British decorators painted flowers; he added a freedom and artistry that now singles out British flower painting, and he created a new technique for painting roses, which you can see in this design. Billingsley worked at Derby, Worcester and Mansfield. He also set up his own potteries in Pinxton and Nantgarw and created some of the best porcelain ever made, but racking up great debts, before running off in the dead of night and ending his days at Coalport painting flowers.
Items painted by William Billingsley are rare and very much in demand - together with Thomas Baxter's work they are probably among the most desired pieces of British porcelain.
The Earl of Camden service was a huge service ordered by Lady Camden in 1795. It had to be produced under great, and unrealistic, time pressure and was notoriously late, much to Lady Camden's chagrin. She wanted the service to be produced by only the best artisans and therefore William Billingsley was tasked with painting all items - but it is thought that when it was clear the deadline was impossible to make, he enlisted the help of John Brewer for some of the last items, such as the ice pails. This plate shows the typical "Billingsley" roses: a beautiful naturally flowing garland of English roses interspersed with buds, trailing around a crisp gilt ribbon. The way the roses link into each other, the way each individual one is completely different, the light effects achieved by rubbing out some of the pink paint, and the very fine buds and foliage all point to these being from Billingsley's hand.
This dish came together with a plate that bears labels that point to a rich provenance: the Doris Wheatley Collection, the Daniel Collection, Derek Gardner...
Category
1790s English George III Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
H&R Daniel Pair of Low Comports, Queens Shape, Grey, Named Landscapes, ca 1838
By H&R Daniel
Located in London, GB
This is a rare and beautiful pair of low comports made by H&R Daniel in about 1838. The dishes are potted in the "pierced" or "Queens" shape and bear pattern no. 7162 with two named ...
Category
1830s English Rococo Revival Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Urania. An Art Nouveau pewter fruit bowl with a loop handle floral decoration
By Friedrich Adler
Located in London, GB
Urania Pewter Ware Maastricht, Holland. An Art Nouveau pewter fruit or bread bowl with a loop handle floral decoration to the sides. Urania was founded i...
Category
Early 1900s Dutch Art Nouveau Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Pewter
Large Chinese Export Silver Bowl
By Hung Chong & Co.
Located in London, GB
A large Chinese Export Silver Bowl with chrysanthemum decoration on a matte background. It was retailed by HC, for Hung Chong "鸿昌", whose shop was in Shanghai between around 1870-194...
Category
19th Century Chinese Chinese Export Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver
English Art Deco hand-hammered fruit bowl or centrepiece with extending handles
By A.E. Poston & Co. Ltd 1
Located in London, GB
A E Poston Co Ltd London. An Art Deco hand-hammered pewter fruit bowl or center piece with stylish extending handles. Stamped A E Poston Co Ltd Londo...
Category
1930s English Art Deco Vintage London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Pewter
WAS Benson style Arts & Crafts silver-plate centrepiece with conical shaped bowl
Located in London, GB
WAS Benson style. An Arts & Crafts silver-plate centerpiece with conical shaped bowl raised on three stylized legs with little pad feet, retaining the original green glass liner.
Category
Early 1900s English Arts and Crafts Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver Plate
Set of Seven Glass Finger Bowls, by James Powell
Located in London, GB
James Powell, Whitefriars, a set of seven glass finger bowls.
See Evans, Wendy, Ross, Catherine and Werner, Alex 'Whitefriars Glass: James Powell and Sons...
Category
Early 20th Century London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Glass
Flight Worcester Dish or Stand, Mazarine Blue, Gilt and Floral Sprays, ca 1785
By Flight Worcester
Located in London, GB
This is a beautiful oval dish or stand made by Flight in Worcester probably around the year 1785. The dish is decorated with a mazarine and gilt rim and has beautiful hand painted fl...
Category
1780s English George III Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Large Chinese Export Silver Bowl
Located in London, GB
A large Chinese export silver bowl with chrysanthemum decoration on a matte background. It was made by Hung Chong of Canton or Shanghai, circa 1895.
The bowl sits on a wood stand.
...
Category
19th Century Chinese Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver
Stunning Art Nouveau Design Sterling Silver Serving Dish, London, 1905
By John Round & Son Ltd. 1
Located in London, London
Hallmarked in London in 1905 by John Round & Son Ltd., this, stylish, Edwardian, Antique Sterling Silver Double Serving Dish, is Art Nouveau in style, featuring floral decoration, an...
Category
Early 1900s English Art Nouveau Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Sterling Silver
20th Century Japanese Amari floral Serving dish gilded handles
Located in Southall, GB
These 20th-century Japanese Amari floral serving dishes with gilded handles represent a beautiful fusion of Japanese artistry, functionality, and cultural expression.
15 Available
Category
1970s Vintage London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Porcelain
Pair of George III Sauceboats Made in London by William Cripps, 1763
By William Cripps
Located in London, GB
A very fine pair of early George III Sauceboats made in London in 1763 by William Cripps.
The Sauceboats are of a substantial size and stand on three ribbed legs with shell feet and...
Category
18th Century English George III Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver
Suite of Four Silver-Plated Bronze Dessert Stand Comports, French, circa 1890
Located in London, GB
With an applied initial to each, applied inside an oval bead-edge lozenge. Each raised on four feet. further decorated with openwork latticing, floral and foliate decoration.
Category
Late 19th Century French Neoclassical Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver Plate
Stylish Art Deco Design Sterling Silver Bowl, Sheffield 1934 John Round & Son
By John Round & Son Ltd. 1
Located in London, London
Hallmarked in Sheffield in 1934 by John Round & Son Ltd., this handsome, Sterling Silver bowl, is in the Art Deco taste, standing on 3 fin style feet.
The bowl measures 3.25"(8cm...
Category
1930s English Art Deco Vintage London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Sterling Silver
Set of 4 Comport Dessert Stands, circa 1890
Located in London, GB
Excellent quality circular form set of 4 dessert stand comports. Classically styled with fluted decoration and cross cut glass bowls.
Category
Late 19th Century French Neoclassical Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver Plate
Large Chinese Export Silver Bowl
By Hung Chong & Co.
Located in London, GB
A large Chinese Export Silver Bowl with chrysanthemum decoration on a matte background. It was retailed by HC, for Hung Chong "鸿昌", whose shop was in Shanghai between around 1870-194...
Category
19th Century Chinese Chinese Export Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver
Chinese Export Silver Bowl
Located in London, GB
Chinese export silver bowl on plain round pedestal base. The decoration is of two applied opposing dragons against a plain background. The bow...
Category
19th Century Chinese Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver
An Extremely Rare Engine Turned Jug and Sugar Bowl by Robert Garrard, 1864
By Robert Garrard I
Located in London, GB
An Extremely Rare Engine Turned Jug and Sugar Bowl Made in London in 1864 by Robert Garrard.
The Jug and Bowl both stand on a circular spreading foot and the circular main body rise...
Category
19th Century English Early Victorian Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver, Sterling Silver
George III Fluted Bowl Made in London by Robert Hennell, 1777
By Robert Hennell
Located in London, GB
A very fine George III Fluted bowl made in London in 1777 by Robert Hennell.
The Bowl was most probably used to serve exotic chilled fruits and grapes and stands on an applied ring ...
Category
18th Century English George III Antique London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Silver
Contemporary Sterling Silver Bowl Round Double Skinned Wave Alex Brogden 1993
By Alex Brogden
Located in London, GB
An immensely impressive modern Sterling Silver Bowl by the notable contemporary silversmith Alex Brodgen. This large STerling Silver Bowl is made with a double skinned design and gor...
Category
20th Century English London - Serving Bowls
Materials
Sterling Silver