I have come across a few auction listings at prestigious auction houses for English plates with gadrooned borders dating from c1700-c1720.
Occasionally, these auction listings will mention that the plates have been "reshaped" at the end of the 18th century or beginning of the 19th century (see below).
- Is the reshaping assessment based on the style and gadrooned border, or some evidence of alteration not shown in the picture?
- Are any plates from c1710 with this gadrooned form original to the period or have they all been reshaped?
- If so, why is reshaping only mentioned in the occasionally auction listing instead of the majority?
- What did the original plates look like?
- If the object's use remained the same (i.e. the plate was reshaped, but it is still a plate), is it considered an illegal alteration?
- Berry spoons/fruit spoons are altered but are not considered illegal because their use is the same
A set of twelve George I silver dinner plates mark of John White, London, 1719, reshaped circa 1770
Each shaped circular, with gadrooned border, the border engraved with three crests, the reverse engraved with scratch weight