Guessing the world is running out of dome covers as I can't seem to find anything like this...not even a match on the knob finial/handle. I expect it's not a butter as it has been vented all the way around. But what would it have covered? Heavy enough for hotels or estates, maybe a bit too much for most households. Engraved monogram or logo of R-within-H ("RH" or "HR"). Date symbol is 1904. Additional factory codes or markings are O..A..O..C.
Approximately 5-6" diam. x 5-6" height.
Gorham 1904 Heavy Dome Cover Vented
Re: Gorham 1904 Heavy Dome Cover Vented
Hi,
There are butter dishes with pierced cover (both silver and porcelain).
At 6`` I cannot think of anything else.
Regards
There are butter dishes with pierced cover (both silver and porcelain).
At 6`` I cannot think of anything else.
Regards
Re: Gorham 1904 Heavy Dome Cover Vented
How 'bout this oddity on Mappin & Webb pages..a dome on an egg steamer? I don't doubt that vented domes exist, but does that not defeat the purpose of a cold vault before the days of air conditioning (c.1929-on). Might someone want to vent the aroma of soft cheeses in a similar type dish? Breads/muffins seem to be no-venters. Puddings? Oatmeal/Porriges?
At any rate, some older Gorham plate versions of this sectional finial date c.1888-92 origins. This may have been a slightly later modernization of those. Or is it a throwback? The vent design give me the sense of an early switch toward Craftsman, but even that might be retrospective.
At any rate, some older Gorham plate versions of this sectional finial date c.1888-92 origins. This may have been a slightly later modernization of those. Or is it a throwback? The vent design give me the sense of an early switch toward Craftsman, but even that might be retrospective.
Re: Gorham 1904 Heavy Dome Cover Vented
:: Could this not be the dome top to an "egg coddler" and I know they exist because I have seen a Tiffany egg coddler in person, it had chicken feet ::
Here is an example in silver plate, it seems as if sterling silver examples are rare, also I can't recall ever seeing a date-code-symbol on a piece of Gorham silver plate, usually I see them on sterling silver, and even on sterling silver they are uncommon ::
Here is an example in silver plate, it seems as if sterling silver examples are rare, also I can't recall ever seeing a date-code-symbol on a piece of Gorham silver plate, usually I see them on sterling silver, and even on sterling silver they are uncommon ::
Re: Gorham 1904 Heavy Dome Cover Vented
I think the purpose was not to keep the egg cold, rather the purpose was to vent the steam created by the egg-coddling process because otherwise the steam would build up inside the dome and create pressure which could cause your hand to scald when you removed the dome :::
Re: Gorham 1904 Heavy Dome Cover Vented
Oddly, even the HanksCraft egg boiler/cookers (w/glass poacher insert) of the 1930's used a non-vented metal dome (stainless with knob) for this work. Venting would make sense with steam, but there a a lot of good ideas with poor execution over time..that's why they disappear (eg. "As Seen on TV!"). Wish I could locate the original base pieces to this one so we would know for sure.
Re: Gorham 1904 Heavy Dome Cover Vented
Gorham snippet posting (by Trev.) for Hotel Hollenden 1891 showing drawing with some items having similar looking finials (long neck, half-acorn shape, wedges): viewtopic.php?f=38&t=39068&p=162651&hil ... en#p162651