top of page
A Large Victorian group with watch holder

A Large Victorian group with watch holder

SKU: RJ00594
£50.00Price

Hundreds of pottery factories were set up in Staffordshire during the Victorian period, many of them producing crued colourful figures, sold to decorate the more humble households. In a dark cottage in winter they must have seemed so bright and joyful, their colours brightening any room they were displayed, from kitchen to bed chamber.

 

This is a large group figure of the three graces, highly coloured incorporating a place to hold a pocket watch. Watch holders were very popular in the Victorian period, there is a hole in the front of the figure, in the evening when the man of the house has finished his work, he would take his pocket watch off and place it through the hole in the back of the figure, this would sit on the internal ledge and display the face of the pocket watch from the front, thus looking like a mantle clock. This would have been in the home of a lower to middle income family.

 

The group has some damage, their is a hand missing from the figure in the centre and a chip to the arm of the figure on the left , it is showing some crazing to the glaze like most Stafforshire figures.

 

Dimensions: 23cm x 31cm x 7cm

rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg
rufus-2.jpg

c8462c36-50b1-65d9-2a88-c7f1a6f1a24d

0ee30d18-05aa-3779-4eac-d1e48a307ba2

'Monty' Bell

0

Available

£45.00

Buy

suffix

Enquire

SKU:

RJ00594

Period:

1890

Hundreds of pottery factories were set up in Staffordshire during the Victorian period, many of them producing crued colourful figures, sold to decorate the more humble households. In a dark cottage in winter they must have seemed so bright and joyful, their colours brightening any room they were displayed, from kitchen to bed chamber.

 

This is a large group figure of the three graces, highly coloured incorporating a place to hold a pocket watch. Watch holders were very popular in the Victorian period, there is a hole in the front of the figure, in the evening when the man of the house has finished his work, he would take his pocket watch off and place it through the hole in the back of the figure, this would sit on the internal ledge and display the face of the pocket watch from the front, thus looking like a mantle clock. This would have been in the home of a lower to middle income family.

 

The group has some damage, their is a hand missing from the figure in the centre and a chip to the arm of the figure on the left , it is showing some crazing to the glaze like most Stafforshire figures.

 

Dimensions: 23cm x 31cm x 7cm

Loading GIF.gif

Need more?

Please enquire and we can source them for you

30% buy-back available on all items

bottom of page