Hello again, I’ve been brought back to our “French Quarter” by a little spoon I just bought. When I say small I mean small as it is less than 7 centimeters long and I think my images could go with this post. I assume my spoon is a salt spoon and it carries a Minerva mark with a 1 for 950 silver.
Although I am responding in this particular post, I did not at first think my spoon’s “AD” maker was ”Albert Deflon”. I was confused by the insect mark under struck to the Minerva mark.
I thought “bigorne” marking was a 19th century system and ”Albert Deflon’s” dates are suggested as 1907-20. Further research disproved my belief and indicated “bigorne” marking was continued to 1984. If my spoon had been British I would have guessed it was in the “Art Nouveau” style and be from the late Victorian-Edwardian period at the turn of the 20th century. This adds even more evidence that my “AD” mark is that of ”Albert Deflon” and the thick line between the 2 letters represents the “wicker gabion” pictorial part of his mark.
I do not think the gabion is the “fat” kind you can currently get in your local garden centre containing rocks for an ornamental feature, but is a narrower type and just thick enough to act as shot protection in a military context. Anyway please forum is my little spoon a product from ”Albert Deflon”?
Fishless