Featured Chikaramachi Japan Thousand Faces coffee set

Discussion in 'Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain' started by Andyjp1, Apr 29, 2020.

  1. Andyjp1

    Andyjp1 Active Member

    Here’s another set I have, thoughts?

    837358EC-1923-4F15-8856-90E37BA40451.jpeg
     
  2. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    That looks Deco to me. Can we see the mark? Someone might be able to figure out more.
     
  3. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    Hi Andy. Could you show us the marks please?
     
  4. Andyjp1

    Andyjp1 Active Member

    Here you go
     

    Attached Files:

  5. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    With the word Foreign in place of Japan, the set is at least post 1928 and quite possibly post WW2 and so marked to be imported into the UK.

    I can't see the little circles inside the horizontal color stripes. Can we see a closer picture? I'm having a tough time with your "Thousand Faces" designation.
     
  6. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Click the picture so the site will blow it up. Those circles are the faces.
     
  7. Andyjp1

    Andyjp1 Active Member

    C6264249-05D8-433B-A857-9C7BC0976B7C.jpeg
     
    Lucille.b likes this.
  8. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    So there does seem to be sort of a stick-figure face in each circle, but it really does look like a typical thousand face design. Maybe it is because it is from the newer time frame?
     
  9. i need help

    i need help Moderator Moderator

  10. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    This design seems to have been made over a long period of time and by a variety of makers (some not specifically identified in the marks.) The oldest pieces I found online have pre-1921 character-only marks, not the mark on your set.

    What other "thought categories" did you have in mind?
     
    Christmasjoy and Lucille.b like this.
  11. SBSVC

    SBSVC Well-Known Member

    From Gotheborg:

    Chikaramachi, Made In Japan. In use on porcelain made at the Noritake factory, Chikaramachi branch, during 1928-1946. Mark occurs in black and red. Porcelain intended for the United Kingdom market uses "Foreign" instead of Made in Japan. Same factory also used a mark with a crown inside a wreath. After the Noritake Morimura Gumi period that ended 1946, the factory changed name to Hinode Shokai.

    http://www.gotheborg.com/marks/20thcenturyjapan.shtml

    From Kovels:

    ...mark was used by the Noritake factory on Chikaramachi Street in Nagoya, Japan. In 1876 Baron Ichizaemon Morimura and his brother founded Morimura Bros., a trading company, in Tokyo. In 1904 Morimura established a porcelain manufacturing company, Nippon Toki Gomei Kaisha, in Noritake, Japan. The company began exporting porcelain dinnerware in 1914. "Made in Japan" was used as part of the mark about 1908. The Chikaramachi crown mark was registered in 1928 and was used for several years. The company name became Noritake Co., Limited in 1981 and is still in business.

    Mark Brown, wnantqs@verizon.net said...
    CHIKARAMACHI, An Early Member of the Noritake Family
    by Marshall (Mark) Brown
    The name Chikaramachi has been an integral part of the history of Noritake china since 1896. Little documentation exists today because nearly all the early records were lost when an incendiary bomb destroyed the home offices of Noritake on 19 March 1945. In the rubble and ashes were over 50 years of one-of-a-kind porcelain samples, ceramic molds, original drawings and sketches, registration records, etc.

    The Morimura brothers, Ichizaemon and Toyo, first founded Morimuragumi (Morimura Association) in Tokyo as a Japanese goods export business, and the Hinode Company in New York in 1876. By 1882, they realized the great potential for chinaware and gradually developed what would become Noritake as their main line of merchandise. Existing records indicate that Morimuragumi had already established several exclusive porcelain decorating factories in Tokyo, Kyoto and Nagoya by 1884. In 1896, land was purchased to construct 5 buildings to consolidate the entire decorating process in Nagoya and the project was completed in 1899. Of significance is the name of one of the two parallel streets between which the buildings were constructed, Shumokucho and Chikaramachi.

    The first Chikaramachi back stamp was registered in 1912. It consists of the Chinese ideograph character for tree within a circle surrounded by the words CHIKARAMACHI above and MADE IN JAPAN below. Noritake referred to this as the MARU-KI backstamp. There are no records indicating the significance of the blue, green or red color varieties.

    The second series of three backstamps was registered in 1928. A crown within a laurel wreath had the word CHIKARAMACHI in a semi-circle above and MADE IN JAPAN in a straight line below. This mark appears in green or black. The second mark is red and consists of a slightly smaller crown within a laurel wreath with two lines in a semi-circle above CHIKARAMACHI and HANDPAINTED, and a semi-circle below, MADE IN JAPAN. The third mark is a samurai helmet with the word Chikaramachi in script in a semi-circle above, and MADE IN JAPAN in a straight line below. It is unknown what color varieties were produced. There are variations of the backstamps with the words FOREIGN or IMPORT used in place of MADE IN JAPAN. This was for those pieces exported to England.

    Although it is unknown why Noritake developed and identified Chikaramachi as a separate line, there are several indicators that point to it being an apprenticeship program. First, the quality of the porcelain of many Chikaramachi pieces is quite crude having numerous imperfections and rough, unfinished edges. Second, the painting on many of the pieces is not up to Noritake standards with little consistency in layout and a definite lack of finesse in the brushwork. Yet, there are pieces that are the equal of the best of Noritake, almost as if they were produced on a trial basis to perfect the design before allowing their integration into the parent company lines. It's not known when they stopped using the Chikaramachi back marks, but all production, along with U.S. exports, ceased in 1942.
     
  12. janetpjohn

    janetpjohn Well-Known Member

    There is some of this Thousand Faces pattern on replacements.com.
     
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  13. Lucille.b

    Lucille.b Well-Known Member

    There are a number of these on Ebay as well if there was a need to research resale value. On Ebay I used the search words: "Chikaramachi faces".

    Love the colors on these. Very handsome set.
     
    Christmasjoy and Aquitaine like this.
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