A coffee can is small, aka demi-tasse. The size of the piece above we call a mug, although without a handle this defies the norms of a mug.
MY first impression was also Gaudy Welsh (aka Swansea Cottage) but several Staffordshire potteries also produced their own Gaudy Welsh patterns....
No-one can be 100% sure as we are all going on past experience and accumulated knowledge and not one of us has all the answers on this very long...
Good overall assessment as not def not English and I can only add to your early-mid 18thC date that the rule of thumb for drawer bottoms applies...
"Vienna wall clock". Terminology of the English/British professional antiques trade.
Being a "British member" I can't see this being English at all. The Georgians were in love with mahogany and finely French polished to show the...
These are normally called a Torchere, originally candle stands in Georgian period, Victorian period for oil lamps, etc but but in mid-late...
These are commonly termed Vienna Wall Clocks mostly 19thC whether weight or spring-pendulum driven originating in Vienna and copied in several...
Edwardian English wardrobe. That hardware was common English fare for the period ad used right through the 20s/30s and 40s... and the triple hook...
The pulls are revivalist, as English furniture makers at the turn of the 18th/19thC were adorning chests of drawers with commemorative...
This looks more like 1930s-ish rather than Edwardian. Especially with those handles and plywood panels. Edwardian I'd expect to look like these...
Correct sir. Doulton Lambeth produced stoneware, not pottery. It's also possible that this is a modern repro as I have ever see this logo in all...
These are called Roman balance scales and were used to weigh everything, not just grain. These look 19thC.
I agree. The pattern was made with a ring punch. Leather workers use the same/similar tool for pattern making.
Your key and lock are from a later era than the OP's. The screws in the lock are off-centre, thus hand cut as said before. I respect your...
Although your overview of rabbet joints etc may hold water in the classical sense of an apprentice piece, we do not know the level of...
Apologies, I thought |I had included the base. Yes agree that the decoration is a vase not a wine flask. [ATTACH]
I can go with that. Torn between the two due to lack of back stamp or impressed/incised marks.
To me, this is a European piece, possibly English, the colours Mason's style, ad with those numbers on the base. The colours are "Imari" but the...
In UK we call these rose bowls. Yours looks Indian made, 20thC.
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