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  2. Old Country Roses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Country_Roses

    Old Country Roses is a pattern of bone china made by English tableware manufacturer, Royal Albert, a brand of Royal Doulton. It is said to be the best selling pattern for tea services in the world since its creation in 1962.

  3. Bristol porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_porcelain

    Cup and saucer, 1774, from the Champion period. The Latin inscription reads: "R. and J. Champion gave this as a token of friendship to J. Burke the best of British wives, on the third day of November, 1774". [2] This was Jane, Mrs Edmund Burke; Champion was a friend, who helped Burke's election that year as a Bristol MP.

  4. Paragon China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paragon_China

    Cup and saucer commissioned to mark the birth of Princess Margaret. 1930 - The Duchess of York commissioned a tea service to mark the birth of Princess Margaret Rose (later Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon). This pattern also has two birds, as well as marguerite and rose flower designs, referring to the given names of the princess.

  5. Lowestoft Porcelain Factory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lowestoft_Porcelain_Factory

    [3] [4] All told, the factory was in production for longer than any English soft-paste porcelain producer other than Royal Worcester and Royal Crown Derby. [3] Geographically, it was isolated from other porcelain factories, or indeed makers of fine earthenware, which probably accounts for a relatively slow-moving stylistic development.

  6. Hutschenreuther family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hutschenreuther_family

    Osborne Art Studio decorated Lorenz Hutschenreuther Selb cup and saucer Osborne Art Studio backstamp on Lorenz Hutschenreuther Selb saucer Osborne Art Studio decorated Hutschenreuther Selb 6-1/4 plate. Hutschenreuther is the name of a German family that established the production of porcelain in northern Bavaria, starting in 1814.

  7. Chelsea porcelain factory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelsea_porcelain_factory

    Saucer with fable by the "Chelsea Fable Painter", perhaps Jefferyes Hamett O'Neale, c. 1752. The silversmith Nicholas Sprimont (1716–1771), who came from Liège in modern Belgium, was the usual public face of the factory, but there were other main figures, and the precise roles of all of them are uncertain. Charles Gouyn or Gouyon (before ...