Featured 830S silver ladle - Norway? Somewhere else?

Discussion in 'Silver' started by SBSVC, Feb 4, 2020.

  1. SBSVC

    SBSVC Well-Known Member

    As I've mentioned many times, I have a lot of silver, and it's been all neatly packed away since DH & I moved to NH a few years back. Out of sight, out of mind, and all that...

    Today, as I was going thru my lingerie chest, I found this ladle in one of the drawers. Heaven knows when/why I put it there, but since I have unearthed it, I figured I might as well ask about it...

    It's 6" long, with a monogram, dated on the back 14-5-21 (May 14, 1921) and marked 830S, with no other marks. Any thoughts?

    silver ladle 1.JPG silver ladle 2.JPG silver ladle 5.JPG silver ladle 4.JPG silver ladle 3.JPG
     
  2. SBSVC

    SBSVC Well-Known Member

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  3. antidiem

    antidiem Well-Known Member

    Wow that is really interesting and very pretty, not sure why this silver ladle isn't worth more than the list price on ebay though, perhaps they are selling it for scrap value?
     
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  4. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    Very close, if not exactly the same.

    Based on Cheryl's commentary on Norwegian designs, I would not ascribe yours to Magnus Aase just because that listing did. I have seen her rattle off a long list of makers who had produced the same design as something shown here on occasion. But I bet she knows the pattern name!
     
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  5. SBSVC

    SBSVC Well-Known Member

    Bakers, it turns out that there's an eBay SOLD listing that says Magnus Aase Albert Carlsen for another that's similar...

    I guess I can at least say it's Norwegian!
     
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  6. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    Yes you can and yes you should. :)

    The Norwegian mark designating a design as the equivalent to our "patented" is the letters NM (Norsk monster) and I didn't see that on the Aase ladle, so other makers would have been totally free to use that design without having to license it. And for that matter it could just be a traditional design that anyone could use.
     
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  7. SBSVC

    SBSVC Well-Known Member

    Bakers, I sort of thought that, too. I think I must have bought it years ago, just because it was so pretty!
     
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  8. terry5732

    terry5732 Well-Known Member

    The same pattern was made by many makers

    Norwegian silver seems to have hit a dead end lately. The USPS rate hikes likely have something to do with it as most is going to Europe.
     
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  9. DragonflyWink

    DragonflyWink Well-Known Member

    The pattern is 'Flat Rose', it was based on a traditional 19th century Norwegian pattern, and somewhere around 1900, the Theodor Olsen shop started producing it as a die-stamped, rather than engraved, line pattern, it was most often made by Th. Olsens Eftf., with Brodrene Lohne another prolific maker of the pattern, and it was made and/or retailed by others as well. If I recall the history correctly, the conjoined 'MA/crown-over-seven-dots' mark that is usually attributed to Magnus Aase became Th. Olsens' mark in 1903/04, when Aase and his brother bought the shop, operating it as Th. Olsens Eftf., and Magnus Aase continued as a retailer, using the marks, 'M.AA' and 'M.AASE', Aase closed down in the '90s, but unless something's changed in the last few years, Olsens is still in business.

    I like the hook - so practical...

    ~Cheryl
     
  10. SBSVC

    SBSVC Well-Known Member

    Thanks so much, Cheryl!
     
    Any Jewelry likes this.
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